*J^ ryy o 



^9^ 











' • o* O 










^■^'\o^ >^:'T^-\/ 















. ^ .-{.*' ^^mi/,^^ '-f. 






.**^ 



■..^ :MM^ \/ •^: "^-Z :^ 


















i^^^- 

^•^ 

' -^.f 









<-. 













r^r^ 








A^^^^ 
V ^ 












V ^ - 



l 



5H 





!♦:* 



A Romantic Tragedy, 

IN 5 ACTS, 

mwM on ^cott^^ Mavel of the ''m(it 0f Eammmnaor' 



n; AND 

RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED 



TO THE 

BY THE AUTHORS, 

F. S. Ganter and GrEOHGE H. Braughn. 



NEW ORLEANS: 

JOHN W. MADDEN, PRINT, 73 CAMP ST. 

18 7 3. 



.t..rM according to Act of Congress, in the year 1873, by GEO H. BRAUGHN. in the office ot 
the Librarian of Congiess, at Washington, U. t. 



RAVENSWOOD. 

IN FIVE ACTS. 

Founded on Scott's Novel of the Bride of Lammermoor, 

AND 

RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED 

TO THE 

SHAKSPEARE CLUB, 

By the Authors, 



F. S. GANTER and GEORGE H. BRAUGHN. 

u * 



%kn- 



NEW ORLEANS: 
JOHN W. MADDEN, PRINT, 73 CAMP ST. 

1873. 






EAVENSWOOD ! 

A EOMANTIC TRAGEDY IN FIVE ACTS 
(Founded on SeoWs Xovel of ^'The Bride of Lammermoor.") 

By F. S. Ganter and G. H. Braughn. 



I3ramatt0 |)er0once. 



EDGAR, Master of Ravens wood. 

MARQUIS ATHOL, his uncle, after Prime Minister of England 

SIR WILLIAM ASHTON, Lord Keeper of Scotland. 

COLONEL DOUGLAS ASHTON, his son. 

HENRY ASHTON, a boy, also his son. 

LORD BUCKLAW. 

CAPTAIN CRAIGENGELT, his Parasite. 

CAEEB, Edgar's Domestic. 

BIDE-THE-BENT, a Presbyterian Reverend. 

A SCOTCH EPISCOPALIAN CHAPLAIN. 

LADY ASHTON, wife of Sir William. 

LUCY, their Daughter. 

ALICE, their dependent, formerly of the Ravenswoods. 

MYSIE, Edgar's Domestic. 

Lords, Bailiffs, Ladies, Attendants, an Apparition, etc. 



The Scene is laid in Scotland, during the Ileign of Queen Anne. 



RAVENSWOOD 



ACT I. 

ScEXE First. — The shore of the North Sea ; Cliffs ; a drear No- 
vemher morning. On the R. u. side, a Gothic Chapel ; in 
the rear, Wolffs Crag, from whose portal a funeral pi'o- 
cession with banners, issues to the mournful notes of draped 
trumpets. As the head, with the coffin, Edgar, and the 
Chaplain reaches the ChapeVs open arch it is met hy SiB 
AsHTON ^vith Bide-the-Bent and Bailiffs. 

Ash. I bid yoii in tlie Queen's naine : halt ! ( They rest) 
EdCt. Atrocious Aallain ! Why this sacrilege ? 
Ash. That you shall answer — I'll prevent it by 

The substitution of my priest for yours. 
Edg. Not till another corpse displaces this. 
Ash. Sir Priest, on pain of banishment, were you 

Forbid to minister : avoid this place. 
Edg. Stay here in peace. Why tremble, friend ? Are you 

God's Servant, or the slave of man ? 
Chap. Alas! The Presbytery have denounced 

Me to their creature, to the Keeper here. 
Bide. Beloved Brother, by your leave, I'll clip 

You of this perquisite. 
Edg. Demand it of the devil, whom you serve. 
Ash. You'll own our Church's funeral rites or none. 
Edg. I reck not creeds, but reverence all the gates 

That lead from life to dread eternity. 

{To Chap.) My dying father willed to pass through yours: 

There waits his corpse : Officiate ! 
Ash. Your duty, bailiffs, bar the threshold there. 
Edg. {draws sword ; attendants follow him.) 

Upon this theme, I'll cope the world in arms : 

His sainted soul's not safer with our God, 

Than is his sacred relic here with me ; 

Stand back, or I shall end this outrage with 

A bloody stop ! {They yield ; the coffin is borne in, and rested 

at the Charnel vault. All enter, uncovered, with stvords still 

drawn, save Edgar, Ashton and his party. The Chaplain 

reads inaudibly from book to " {aloud) " below. 
Ash. You have your way, but you shall rue the day 

You blustered the Lord Keeper down. 



4 RAVENSwooD. [Act 1. 

Edg. Be you tlie keeper or the kept of Hell, 
To me you're simply William Ashton. Tray, 
Begone! 
Ash. Sir, by your leave, not yet. 
Edg. Stay at your peril ; in the choleric 

Distempered state, your presence puts me m, 
I'll stand for nothing. 
Ash. Ha ! you'd not murder me ? 
Edg ^^^' ^'^ ^^ 

Forget myself, and God! remember you, 
I would not own the sottisb hardihood, 
To dare the presence of my victim's corpse. 
As you my father's. , . i • , 

Ash. Sir, sir -young man, how 8 this T 
j,jj^^ By Heav'ns ! you are 

\ feller caitiff than I took you for : 
Your houndish nature prowls around its prey. 
To know it dead for sure, and if it stirs. 
You throttle it for the last. Be satisfied ! 
Ilnlid the coffin ; let bim see the corpse : 
The deadly griet that you have struck him with 
Is sheeted on bis face. . 

^gjj O far amiss I 

Not sucb bas been, not such is my intent. 
Edg. Sure of his death, you'd raven still his spoils ? 
The acquisitions of five hundred years 
Of bonorable service to the state were bis : 
You, by one tricky turn in politics, 
Have made them yours, and of our house, you left 
Him but yon cradle and this tomb ! 
Ash These by the las^t edict are also mine. 
Edg Insatiate worm ! That scorpion sting you spent 
Upon my father's life : it smites not me ; 
But I shall take you to a reckoning 
That you sball curse the day you bribed a court. 
This once, depart : Too long I wrong the dead, 
To parley with— you know, sir, what you are. 
Ash I'm spellbound to behold bow Death transformed 
Tbe spendthrift Ravenswoods to misers here: 

This Chapel's ancient hoard shall satisly 

Edg. Ha ! now I know you as the wretch you are : 
A man-hyena bunting in the grave I 
I'm not condemned to be tbe sentinel 
Against your hellish greed : away, by Heavens ! 
Asn (faints) Save! save! he'll murder me {Ihde suppoyts htm) 
g^^ ^-^ Murder, after you, 

is too abborent to be thought upon. 
T^rni^ Mv lord the Lord's good graee now be your Stan. 
BIDE. I\l> lora, xne i. ^ ^.^^ ^^^ .^.^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^ ASHTON.) 

Edg. Our Scottish reabn's polluted by a ghoul ! {hastens inU 

Chapel.) 
Chap, (aloud) And rest his soul in peace. 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 5 

Edg. Oh ! God, my heart ! I will not own it bleeds, 

Until I see the drops ! I will not cry 

It breaks, before I hear the crack ! Yet, Heaven ! 

Your visitation is considerate : 

Knowino- I could not bear this sorrow twice, 

You gave me but one father. (Falls upon and embraces 
coffin. 

I have been 

More than begotten — I have lived by you ! 
Chap. Yield earth to earth, and dust to dust. (Movement 

among attendants.) 
Edg. Oh ! I would lock your body to my breast, 

Could I stave olf your rendering till my own ! 

But Nature is too strict a creditor, 

And thus when due doth she recall her loan. (Let^ ooffin 
down into vault. All do the last ritet and return into 
the Tower, save Edgar and Caleb.) 
Cal. Sad use he had of it ! Oh ! he shall urge 

High Heaven, where he is, that it requite 

The enemy who wrnaged him so on earth ! 
Edg. The culprit's guilt is his dire punishment. 

And he is damned the most who feels no more. 

Let us hence, too ; I must see life again. 

'Tis only by the hold of memory. 

Not by their bodies, that we own our dead. (They issue 
from Chapel.) 
Cal. Alas ! you grasp them with such hearted clutch, 

You take from them their hue. 
Edg. Oh ! next to death 

Has been my struggle — it is past. 
Cal. Breathless we witnessed your forbearance when 

You could have slain him with impunity. 
Edg. iSIy heart you cannot see — but looks this hand, 

As it could take a human life ? 
Cal. (Grasps it) God bless you, Master ! I do live in you, 

As you did in your sire ; continue thus, 

And all who'll know you, shall rejoice in you. 
Edg. Stern Death revealed to me this life : it is 

A dreadful ordeal that goads me on 

To action, ever action and no rest ! 

And now, by Heavens ! I feel that within. 

Which could, methinks, start all the Universe 

Again in motion, if it were to stop ! 
(Shouts from Tower) Long live the noble house of Ravenswood! 
Cal. Oh ! these gray haiis shall turn to black again 

When I behold it in its former pride. 
Edg. Alas ! It is in vain for souls like mine 

To cure their private ill, for of the world's 

Inherent and eternal misery 

They rid themselves but in their exit hence. 
(Shouts again) We'll oust this upstart from the Keepership. 
Cal. Ha ! now, hear that ! 



6 RAYENSWOOD. [ACT 1. 

Edg. I'd speed its echo to the farthest globe, 

If damned iniquity with Ashton fell! 
(Shouts again) Hail to our next Lord Keeper, Marquis Athol! 
Edg. Now there! Have I not said it f 
Cai,. He is your uncle. 
Edg. But no saint for that. 

Oh ! while this craft besotted age prevails, 

The devil changes but the hell remains. 
Cal. The more's the pity, that the Lord gave up 

This earth as homestead for the evil one. 
Edg. Ha ! there 

You've touched the fundament which I shall sap : 

Yea, were a worse than Satan, he would rule, 

If man acknowleged his dominion, 
Cal. Dispute it, sir ! Our seers predicted, yon 

Would lead the movement that shall change the world. 
Edg. Our God forever lets the world go wrong 

For Man's ado to set it right again : 

That change will come, unless mankind prefer 

To prey on one another like the brutes. 

'Tis time for all to get their due on earth : 

None has too little, when none has too much. 
Cal. The very blessing we are waiting for, 
Edg. Though Evil must continue, it can be 

So vanquished that the good and just prevail, 

And, by His Spirit ! Of this blessed earth, 

I'll reassert to God the ownership. 

IJnter Marquis Athol. 
Athol Come, Master, you absent yourself too long : 

The host is worthy of his guests. What, though, 

They own the lands ?,, You have the brains. 
Edg. Still let them stay apart, since 'tween the two 

There is such scant affinity. 
Ath. There shall be more ; come you're too sensitive : 

Your wine makes us forget ; we're feasting in 

The cave of winds. 
Edg. 'Twill hold me and my father's memory ! 
Ath. But not your son and yours. 
Edg. Why should it not? 

Ath. You'll have no offspring. 
Edg. Prompt me not to taste 

Whereon I've ruminated to my fill. 
Ath. Dilate your vision on this tumble-down 

And crazy castle : scan, assess it well — 

Now do you overween, yours is a home, 

To offer "to a Lady Ravens wood ? 
Edg. Itself, not I, shall speak the invitation. 
Ath. 'Twill do it with a lofty air — well, well! 

Although a maiden's unstaid fancy course 

Around a cottage, I have yet to hear, 

It settled on a quarry by the sea. 
Edg. 'Tis on the earth, the hallowed spot to me, 

And must be to the heart, that locks with mine. 



SC. 2.] RAVENSWOOD. 7 

Ath. I doubt liow yon would fare ; but had your sire 

Proposed so to my sister, you would not be here. 
Idg. But why broach this at such a time ? 
A.TH. Because this is your time. 
JEdg. Sir, you say true ; 

/ It is the altar that requites the grave ! 
/Ath. Be thou converted to my politics. 
iEdg. Oh, sir, thereon I'd have a speech of fire : 

But to what end ? 'T would only scorch my heart I 
Ath. And vex this Age's ear. 'Twere time you learnt, 

Your faith in honesty is heretical. 

But let me be your fortune's priest, and I'll 

Restore to yon the Castle Ravenswood. 

I've tripped this Ashton from the Keepership, 

And you shall be my second. 
Edg. Hardly sir : 

Still where I fix, I must be first or none. 
Ath. Be what you will, so I but have the name. 

There's now within a noble company 

Of Marquises and Dukes ; the least is made 

An Earl or Count. 
Edg. And still of no account ! 

'Tis this proud flesh that ails our body politic. 

But what magician wrought this wondi'ous change f 
Ath. What other than our annexation ? 
Edg. Our 

Annihilation ! Scotland ! My poor Scotland! 

The damned corruption, you have pampered, broke, 

And Annexation is the Cancer's core! 
Ath. Pray, moderate yourself, and listen. 
Edg. Oh ! Scotland's spirit having been undone, 

And prostituted by the vil'st abuse, 

England's, at last, must needs predominate I 

But I'll not be your second, third or last 

In this. If so this union be blest, 

I'll share the general gain ; if it be rued, 

I'd not be bettered by my country's worse. 
Ath. Come, do not, like a vulture, ever track 

Corruption by the stench you snutf. 
Edg. But I'll not feed upon it, though the proof 

Be near, how it does make some natures fat. 

When next you have an honest service for 

The State, call me again ; till then, farewell. (Eteeunf.) 

Scene Second — The Saloon in Eavensivood Castle — Sir Ashton, 
sitting at a table. 

Ash. What boots the father's death, since in the son 
I am relapsed to worse ? 

Unter Lady Ashton. 
Oh ! Margaret, 
Since you're the Duchess Sarah's bosom friend, 
You are infected with a recklessness — 



8 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 1. 

Lady. You Iduuder in your censure, — I from her? 

Sir, were the Duke of Marlborough my spouse, 

Or couhi a woman carve her own career, 

Tlie Euglish throne would boast another queen. 
Ash. She's but in name, what you are here indeed, 

While I'm Vice-Regent of the Scottish realm. 
Lady. As you're a vice, 'tis meet I be the regent. 

But why this plaintive mood ? 
Ash. Would you had pampered 

My rav'nous appetite for public spoils. 

And never hankered for a private's wealth ! 
Lady. Our gain from both but whets my taste for more. 
Ash. No infant quicker to its mother's breast. 

Than I would nurse me Avith my country's i^nrse : 

With these deft lingers I could peculate. 

Till they were stiff, and still with smiles and smirks, 

I'd be the safest scoundrel of them all : 

The Commonwealth is not a Ravens wood ! 
Lady. My vow's fulfilled ! He's humbled to his grave. 
Ash. You willed the deed; I bear the punishment. 
Lady. Wherein, my lord ? 
Ash. Let Life and Death make answer : 

But now I've got him, I shall aggravate 

His riot at the tomb into rebellion 

Against both Church and State. 
Lady. You overween : 

In him 'twill be imputed to his youth ; 

The blame, if any falls upon the Lords. 
Ash. He was the leader ; they but followed him. 
Lady. The worse for him : upon an evil road, 

The best seducer is a first success ; 

And this shall be the bait for his destruction. 

But now to touch him, were to spring the trap 

Before the wolf is in. 
Ash. Meanwhile he'll range, and I shall be his prey, 

And drag my forfeit life, as if I bore 

My coffin on my back. Still wait, and wait ! 

I've damned this patience to the lowest Hell : 

As well bid me go there, and fetch it back, 

As doff me with such tantalizing cheer. 
Lady. Make your own comfort then. 
Ash. Oh ! Margaret ! 

Can you be bo indifferent to my fears ? 
Lady. Beware, my Lord ! Though harmless in themselves. 

Imaginary evils breed the real. 
Ash. Imaginary! Read the legend there, 

The Ravens woods' sanguinary creed : 

" I bide my time " ! Ha ! know you not whereof 

This bull's head is the symbol ? It means Death ! 
Lady. Were it a fox, this Age's type, it were 

A threat indeed ! but— pshaw ! a bull's dull head ? 

Sir, it becomes you well. 



SC. 2.] RAVENSWOOD. 9 

Ash. As does my fear, 

Unless it be, that murder is no more, 

And it be proven that the victims of 

A violent death, have done it on themselves. 
Lady. Old Malise needs must ghost, since in your skull 

He finds his proper haunt, but know, if true. 

That slaughter was three hundred years ago. 
Ash. But yesterday, this Edgar's cousin, Chiesley, slew 

Sir Lockhart in the streets of Edinburgh. 

Since then, I cannot hear a pistol click. 

But cold runs over me ; 1 cannot see 

A knife, but I feel for my sinking heart. 
Lady. Your office warns the assassin to beware. 
Ash. So did the Lord Chief Justice's all in vain — 

This fell, vindictive tribe repects no place: 

In all there's murder running in the blood, 

And I can have no peace until the race 

Of Eavenswood be rooted from the earth ! 

This Edgar is unmarried, has no child. 

And I must strike him, ere he takes a wife. 

Else in his issue, I be cursed again, {faints ) 
Lady. {7-ings) My Lord, what tricks are these ? Though you 
are none. 

Yet seem a man. 
Ash. It is my Chapel fit come back again ! 

I feel a qualm, a dread presentiment. 

That I'll soon meet my deadly foe again ! 
IJnter Servant. 

(to Serv.) Go bid my Highlanders to guard the gates. 

And let none in who are not of the house, (exit Serv.) 
Lady. There is no cure for him, who needs will ail, 

But I, the sound, shall guard our dignity 

Against a maudlin, craven-hearted fool! (Exit). 

Ash. Mas ! not ours a marriage Heaven made I 

My helpmeet's still myself ; I'll sound this Edgar ; 

If comes the worst, I'll buy my peace of him. 

For till I have't I'm with myself at strife, 

And that's to be with all the world at war — 
Entej' Lucy with a Lute. 

Ah! here's my shepherdess of Lammermoor ! 
Lucy. Who tends her lambkins in the twilight's mead. 
Ash. Still what you do, is with such gentleness. 

As if it did itself: your presence breathes 

Of innocence and peace. Oh ! could you know 

What heaving grief your tuneful spell has lulled ! 
Lucy. How gladly I'll resume — 
Ash. N^ay, let it, Lucy : 

There is no strain can gladden like yourself. 

For cunniugst Art attunes no instrument. 

That's so melodious as the human heart. 

And yours has yet to sound its virgin note. 
Lucy. Sir, when it does, your ear shall hear it first. 

To tell me whether it be true or false. 



10 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 1. 

Ash. Of tbat but one can judge : yourself— If 'tis 

Harmonious to your spirit, give to it 

A sweep as boundless as tbe love of Heaven ; 

But if it jar your nature aad your wont, 

Oh ! stifle it for 'tis a demon's bivss ! 
Lucy. Yet, father, in jny text-book I have read, 

That Ave're best mated in our opposites. 
Ash. a most pernicious treach'rous paradox ! 

Is not our conflict with the world enough, 

But to our bosom we must hug the strife ? 

Yea, then the paragon, the demigod 

Becomes a maudlin, craven iu-arted fool ! 
Lucy. Then, like a summer-boat, by drifting ice, 

The heart is crushed in by the freezing stream, 

It rode so gladly in its liquid State. 
Ash. Whence got you that ? 
Lucy. From Observation. 

Ash. True ! 

However hot that dreaded place of pain, 

The Hell of married life is killing chill ! 
Lucy. I'll treasure your advice, meanwhile I have 

Far better pastime than to think of love. 
Ash. Love is no pastime, Lucy : earthly are 

All other passions; this one is divine, 

For 'tis God's iuterest and care, that still 

His earth be peopled to the end of time. 
Lucy. I'll think of love with more religious awe : 
(ffrasj^s his hand) Ah ! how now^ I feel how sacred they, through 
whom 

I got my life ! But 'tis of marriage more 

Thau love you speak. 
-^SH. A wider charter than 

A child's is yours : wed, Lucy, w-hom you will, 

A noble or a common, rich or poor, 

So only he be not my enemy. 
Lucy. My father, still in our dislikes we're one. 
Ash. But do not therefor make my likes your own. 

And yet 'tis in your marriage I must iind 

The l)liss, w^hich in my own I missed! 
Lucy. As I'm your daugiiter, he shall be your sou. 
Ash. My head is for the world, my heart is yours ; 

Though false to all I shall be true to you, 

Who in yourself are such a prize 

Lucy. My father ! 

Ash. Ah me ! like the returning flood, my plague 

Comes back again ! You oft have spoken of 

An aged servant of the Ravenswoods, 

Named Alice, living still on this estate ? 
Lucy. Oh ! sir, she gossips like an oracle, 

And is indeed the living chronicle 

Of Lammermoor. If you would hear her! come, 

I'll take you there. 



SCS. 3-4.] RAVENSWOOD. 11 

Ash. My very wish ; let's go, 

And I shall ease me of the woe, you are 
Too young to share, though old enough to hear. {Exeunt.) 

Scene Third. — A Glade. Enter Edgar hearing a Gmi. 

Edg. I cannot quell this grief; it will not down, 
For 'tis inherent iu the fitful soul 
To rack herself with the reHection of 
What might be, what is not! Yea, ache of loss! 
"When first, alone, we venture on the spot 
A dear one hallowed, who's forever gone ! 
Blest Memory ! still loyal to the dead, 
You've thrust into my passive hands his gun {touches it) 
I scarce may use agaiu. — What dreadful roar! 
These native bulls stay savage, though my house 
That bears their stu>>born head, is civil now. 
Ha I there he braves defiance to his foe 
And mine : the Keeper as my eyes are true ! 
But what revulsion rushes through my breast, 
As Pity strikes my heart's electric cord f 
'Tis not a murd'rous, sacrilegious wretch, 
'Tis but a perilled fellow-mau I see! 
He dies ! The phrensied bull pursues with tumbling 

bounds ; 
He drags a female, and cannot escape ! 
Shall I let Retribution swoop him down. 
Or shall I hinder it ? Eternal Soul ! 
You cannot falter in a moment's test ! 
Up weapon, slay the brute, and save the kind! {Fires 

and rushes out.) 

Scene Fourth.— T//e Mermaid's Well. — Be-entei- Edgar, hear- 
ing Lucij in his ainns. 

Edgar. You are the fairest and the sweetest thing, 
That in this wond'rous world yet rapt ray soul. 
Great Heaven who have made this prodigy, 
As 'twere to see your image in her form, 
Now to these drops vouchsafe that quick'niug force 

{82)rinkles water on hei^) 
Which, in your dew, revives the frailest flower ! 
Still motionless ! My God ! can you be dead. 
And I so lifefull cannot give you part? 
She breathes, yet does not stir ! Would like the sun 
The earth, I could awake you with a kiss ! 
Oh ! Heaven, forgive, that I who tremble with 
Creation's kindred thrill, without her lea re, 
Thus taste the sweetness of your Eden bliss! {Kisses 
Nay, hence I'll doubt no more oar origin ; her.) 

My sight's assurance tells, it is di%dne ! 
She opes her eyes, and like a captured fawn, 
She stares on me, imploring for relief. 



12 RAVENSwooD. [Act 1. 

Lucy. (ShrieJ^-s) Help, Help ! He comes ! O .save us ! Father 

ny ! 
Edgar. Fair maiden, do uot fear; you are as safe 

Aud sheltered here, as if you were at home. 
Lucy. How is it with me ? In what place am I ? ' 

I dreamt I had been gored and trampled on 

And dyiuor, drew jon after to the blest. 

Oh Heavens ! You are not my father ! speak : 

He 18 not hurt ! Do say, he is not killed ? 

Oh let me fly to him ! Come, go with me : 

You see how I still tremble— I'm so faint. 
Edg And therefore do not stir, but look on me, 

And be assured as if your father spoke : 

He is as safe, and unhurt as yourself. 

And ran but to the nearest hut for help, 

Of which, thank Providence, there's now no need. 

Kest here, and when he comes, he'll find you well. 
Lucy. Now I remember all : the raging brute 

Our flight, your shot— ah, sir, I know 'twas you— 

The monster's plunge aud fall ! Oh that was help ! 

But for your habit, I would say you dropped 

J^ rom Heaven to deliver us from death ' 
Edg. Or rather say, that Heaven, seeing how 

One of its Angels was beset by ill. 

Has called a son of earth to ward it ofl". 
Lucy. And be you ever blest for answering it I 
Edg. Had I not done it, woe were me ! 

Had I beheld you, maiden, mangled— dead, 

My desperation would have known but one 

Atonement for my fault, and that had been 

To speed the leaden ball, that felled the brute, 

In your next direst foe— myself, 

^^^^l' w?""" ^J'?^^^ ^^ ^^"^ although your words are dark : 
But I'm still faint and giddy from my fright. 
1 shrink and shudder from the stranger man, 
let am enchanted by my savior's presence. 

Edg. Yea, trust me as you may but one. 

Lucy. My trust in you is surety itself. 

But tell me who you are, that I mav know 
Who saved my life— who is my second father! 

Edg. Still nameless, maiden, let me be to you : 
My patronymic's sound would not accord 
With this celestial moment's harmony. 
It may not grate so harshly on your soul, 
When haply softened by the future's calm. 
-But should it still offend, then think, that once 
A stern, forbidden vision crossed your path, 
-^11 ^ y«« "lay meet again beyond the grave ! 
Ill] then, farewell ! I mav no longer stay. 

LUCY. You shall uot leave, before you me teach how 
lo pay my life long debt of gratitude, 



SC. 4.] RAVENSWOOD. 13 

Edg. Then give to me, what I denied : your name ; 

Which, when I scan my blank of happiness, 

Shall gladden me like tidings from above. 
Lucy. That were no token of my heavy debt : 

What is my name if nothing go with it ? 

Yet since you will it, let it go before. 

Of what shall follow after : noble sir, 

My name is Lucy. 
Edg. Lucy, Lucy ? ay ! 

The very name I'd wish to call you by : 

It is derived from light. Your name, fair lady, 

Shall henceforth be the light, that shines within, 

While you, the torch, remain unneared, unknown. 

Like yonder sun, which giving, loses naught. 

But now, farewell ! My tarrying is not here. 
Lucy. Sir, let me pray you : do not dotf me thus. 

You see how young I am ; but be assured. 

The more I lack in words, the more's my will. 

Stay 'til my father comes, and he for me, 

Shall say how iutinite — Ah, here he is ! 

Enter AsHTON ; Lucy rushes in Ids arms. 

My father you are safe, and I'm unharmed ! 

Here stands the gentleman, who saved our lives. 
Ash. My lord, by what you've done, I'm confident 

You'll pardon my obtrusion now, to own 

You that, for which the name of thanks were but 

A mockery. 
Edg. The issue satisfies 

My will and deed more than a thousand fold. 
Ash. Had you, as its disposer, saved my life, 

rd reverence it as a miracle ; 

But that you snatched me from the brink of death, 

Exceeds the utmost limits of belief. 
Edg. What I have done, is it so wonderful ? 

In saving you, I did not hazard aught. 

From neither fire nor flood I rescued you: 

Esteem him rare, who risks his life for life ; 

But I, in helping, did not singe a hair. 

Nor wet a finger. 
Ash. Sir, you hallowed them ; 

Deny me not, to grasp, to kiss this hand {does so.) 

Which, to be candid, I did apprehend 

Would once be raised to take, and now, behold ! 

It saved my life ! 
Edg. I'm still the same unchanged : 

None from himself can alienate his past. 
Ash. What can I say to this, 

More than that mine has been tlie common fault 

Of rashly judging thera we do not know? 
Edg. We ever censure under penalty. 
Ash. Alas, too true ! But be assured, my debt 

Shall henceforth guage my life's intrinsic worth. 

And by that standard be I blest or doomed ! 

2 



14 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 2. 

Edg. My lord, the sole re<iuital yon cau make, 

Is to be ever conscious of this hour. 

For whatsoever cast my future take, 

ni not stand debtor to an accident. 

Still there's a crying need, that I, Sir Ashtou, 

Converse v^^ith you. 
Lucy, {aside) My father you are mnch too stiff and cold ; 

Come, be to him as cordial and as kind. 

As you are wont to me. You see, he is 

As sensitive as generous. 
Ash. Do not defer, but tell me, ere we part, 

How I may show without what is within, 

And yet remain your debtor to my end ? 

My will to favor you is infinite, 

And that my means are scarcely less, you know. 
Edg, Not this, Lord Keeper, is the proper time : 

Your stirred up feelings billow now too high, 

And I'm as tossed and giddy as yourself; 

Thus I might ask, or you might yield too much. 

Wait till we're fallen to our normal calm ; 

Then weigh my grievance by your equity. 
Ash. I'll hf^ap my scale until it kick the beam. 

Meanwhile the quittance weighs upon my soul. 

I'll henceforth deem my life ennobled by 

Its being saved by such a man as you. 

Sir, I'm as loth to part, as ere this hour, 

I should have been to meet with you : farew^ell ! 
Lucy, (aside) Ah, sir, you are more apt in saviug lives. 

Than keeping secrets : how long, do you think, 

Ere I be quit with you in name for name, 

Although your debtor still ? But should it chance, 

That in your dark, that light should pale or fall, 

Then, pray, remember, that the torch still burns. 

Lucy and Ashton exeunt. 
Edg. As I this minute, so great nature felt. 

When first yon sun burst on the universe. J^xit' 

ACT II. 

Scene I—TJw Tod's Den Inn; enter Bucklaw and Craigen- 

GELT. 

Buck. Captain, you're welcome back. 
Craig. It' that were all. 

Mine were indeed a sorry comiug-back. 
Buck. I see my blunder : Host ! a stoup of wine 

For Captain Craigengelt. 
Craig. Now there, again! 

Enter Host with wine, and exit. 
Buck. I beg your pardon, but what's now your rank ? 
Craig. As various as the countries I have seen : 

From Major on to General in Spain. 



SC. 1.] RAVENS WOOD 15 

Buck. Ho! General Craigeugelt ! (they drink) 
It must souud brave 

In Spanish. 
Craig. More kin to fame, than any name 

This pigmy retching, hero-hungry Age 

Is tooting through its hireling paper trump ! 
Buck. And hence you bluster yours through one — of brass. 
Craig. My lord, whom do we serve ? 
Buck. Whom else but the Pretender? 
Craig. That's ourselves : 

Are we not all pretenders to the world. 

Which in its turn cheats us f But who cau tell 

Where ends the true, and where the false begins. 
Buck. 'Tis even more uncertain than your rank. 
Graig. And yet 'tis said, we shall be what we will ? 
Buck. True. 
Craig. Well, therefore, since I'm tricked by partial fate, 

I am resolved to be indemuitied, 

And pass myself for what I sliould have been. 
Buck. Why should you not ? You have for comrades all 

Those chieftains of our great rebellion. 

Who'd still be leaders, had they never led. 

But what credentials did you ijear abroad ? 
Craig. I tapped my sword, and showed how fields were — lost. 
Buck, (shakes hands) A Captain here, and a General when 
abroad, 

A famous, clever fellow everywhere. 

But sir, your martial and heroic air ? 
Craig. Ha! now you're worth to be a woman. 
Buck. Why ? 

Craig. Because they staid convinced, when all the men 

Had nosed me out a mere imposter. 
Buck. I must confess, it has deceived me too : 

How got you it : 
Craig. As from a musk rank company you take 

Its scent ; so from the incense Peace distils 

From lucky war, I am so odor charged, 

That were you scented with the fumes from me, 

There's not a dame in Lammermoor, but she 

Would swoon to you. 
Buck. And do they so to you ? 

Come now — your smirk confesses it. 
Craig. Let silence lock the hopeful lover's lips. 
Buck. He is a robber, not a conqueror 

Who hides his booty. 
Craig. Well— to tell is not to share : 

Lady Aston's dainty organ scented it. 

And it was sweet to her. 
Buck. Whereon she sueezed — True, rumors will conflict ; 

Yet as I read my proof — of two reports 

About a woman — I'll believe the worse. 
Craig. Now, by your manhood, you'd not iutimate — 



16 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 2. 

Buck. I name no one, nor Avould I scandalize, 

Thougli truly, there is many a dame who knows, 
That her repute is better than herself. 

Craig. Well, let them know't ; but fingers on your lips : 
When I rehearsed to her a certain tale. 
She scowled and fiercely flashed her eyes, as, like 
A restiif tigress, she would break her bonds. 

Buck. I too am fettered where I would be loose: 
Why should we stinted bachelors not glean 
The field, a married Dives does not care 
To harvest ? Let us hear your tale. 

Craig. That golden Age, long prayed for, and in vain, 
But even now prevails where I have been : 
There they love well, who never loved before. 
And they who ever loved, love still the more. 

Buck. A rare, pecular region that for hearts ! 

Craig. A most prolific, love producing clime, 
Where flock the lonely dowagers, when by 
Their pulse they feel their Indian summer's heat ; 
But more than matrons', widows' or of maids. 
It is the married women's Paradise, 
When they would shun the scandal of divorce : 
There by their left hand, they can wed again. 

Buck. I've heard of men who took a dozen wives 
By morganitic form, but that a woman 
Should wed more husbands to her first ? It is 
A most desirable abomination ! 

Craig. When I return, like tlie good book, I'll say 
To you : " Sell all thou hast, and follow me " 
Where your forerunner is my good report. 

Buck. Wherein ? 

Craig. What else but this ? (points to sword) The masters 
The continent, the Monsieur Fondre Feus, 
The Meinherr Sauhiebs and the Senor Pocopocs 
Are but an awkward squad compared to you. 
Are you in j)ractice ? ^ 

Buck. I hold my own, or rather am improved. 

Craig. 'Tis well, for by that fence you scale your goal. 

Buck. Hold in ! 'Tis Ravensv^ood : be politic. 
Enter Edgar. 
Lord Edgar, you are pale. 

Edg. My hopes are ashy ; you're from Edingburgh ? 

Buck. Old Scotland is no more. 

Edg. What ? Can a nation die, and Nature make 
No sign ? 

Buck. There were no tokens save the ones we got. 

Edg. Why sir : were it a pensioned dog you finished, 
The telling of it should afi'ect you more. 

Buck. No death is near to me, except my own. 

And that, thank Heaven ! I'll not live to mourn. 

Edg. Still have I prayed against a nation's fall. 
And now the first I hear of, is my own ! 
Even thus a people die : Oh Scotland ! on 
Your moors I'll own my sorrow, but not here. 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 



17 



Buck. I too regret our country died— so poor, 

Else we had got more bonus for our votes. 
Edg. Sir, have no care : the roster of the dammed 

In Hell includes you all. 
Buck. To solace you 

We kept our country's name. 
Edg. Her epitaph! 

Oh honesty ! you're still as hard a road, 

As when vou first were trod ! 

Is it for this you are our country's lords : 

To sell it as no savage would his tribe ? 
Buck. Pshaw ! leave your patriotism to the mob : 

The thrifty class desire this Union. 
Edg. O Scotland ! what you are therein, you'll know, 

But never what you would have been without ! 
Buck. Yourself, the greatest stickler have confessed, 

The English genius overcame the Scotch ? 
Edg. I know whereof I spoke : I never willed 

Our »'-:cottish nation should drop from the list. 
I^UCK. She's now great England's mate, who leads this Age. 
Edg. But not the future, for her guide's not true. 

Full soon she will decline, and in her fall 

Our Scotland's is involved. 
Buck. Prevent it then. 

Edg. My country ! had you but maintained your own 

Integrity, your mission would have proved 

What Greece's, Rome's, yea even Palestine's 

Have never been to Man, for in your frame 

I would have breathed such a flame, you would 

Have been the beacon of the world ! 
Buck. Ah sir, for that our Scotland were too poor. 
Edg. The spirit's only to the spirit known : 

Where it prevails, a waste Metropolis 

Springs grander than before, but where it lacks, 

A Paradise falls to a wilderness.— 

But since my country lets me be no Scot, 

The world holds out to me to be a man ! 
Craig. And what a man ! Madame de Maintenou 

Declared the Master's would eclipse the fame 

Of Marlborough, whose horoscope she set. 
Edg Sir, whom have I the honor ? 
Craig. I'm General Craigengelt— in Spain. 
Edg. Your wits are very Spanish. 
Buck. Come, head a rise in these united realms. 

And we'll dethrone this chessboard queen, this Anne 

For our Pretender : you shall be his next. 
Edg. My lead's in education, not in war : 

It is the pen that tills, the sword but reaps. 
Craig. Pray, Bucklaw, do not vex the Master more 

With politics : his gallantry prefers 
The saving of a miss's life, to States, 
Especially, if she's the Keeper's daughter. 

2* 



18 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 2. 

Edg. I see our converse has been at its best, 

And so, let's break it off— farewell. (starts.) 

Craig, (aside) Detain bim yet, without him we shall fail. 
Buck. I hope the Master still will deem us friends. 
Edg. Sir, that I may not, for to me that name 

Is hallowed : when I've said, "yon are my friend," 

In weal or in distress, I dare for him 

The farthest lengths as for myself; but for 

This brotherhood, our casual intercourse 

Is much too base. 
Craig, (aside) Browbeat him sh' : depend upon your fence. 
Buck. Then let me tell the Master, never Man 

Shall slight my friendship with impunity, 

Nor injure me by deed, by word or look. 

But he must render strait account thereof. 
Edg. Into what viper's nest have I trod here ? 

But I divined you right : your conduct proves. 

You are not suited for my company-. 
Buck. By Heavens ! Master, know that we are peers ! 
Edg. No truly we are not : you are a lord. 

While I am simply Edgar Raven swood ! 
Buck. I beg your pardon then : I had forgot 

That I too called you lord — by courtesy. 
Edg. Hence call me what you will: it matters not. 
Buck. Then by the law's 'taint : Traitor Ravenswood ! 
Edg. Of all the epithets you might bestow, 

A traitor's were the least ; but I am none. 
Buck. Sir, you inherited your father's shame, 

And was he not the most redoubtable 

Of rebel traitor chiefs, in that most damned. 

Most wicked, causeless, foul rebellion. 

That ever from its drowsy slumbers waked 

A christian world ? 
Edg. Sir, traitor he was none. 

For he betrayed no trust nor friend, but first 

Declared his party, ere he drew his sword. 
Buck. Was he not steeped in gore and treason to his ears ? 
Edg. An unsuccessful revolution 'gainst 

A wrong, corrupt, perverted government 

May be an error, whose worst puuishment 

Is its own failure, but it is no crime. 
Buck. No crime? Onr country had declared it so. 
Edg. And by so doing, has undone herself: 

When she did brand as crime what is no crime, 

She gave her license to that wickeduess. 

Which bred the scoundrels, who have wrought her fall. 
Buck. But I was loyal : that atones for all. 
Edg. That you traduce my father and myself, 

I do not reck of you, who parrot like. 

At random, mouth the phrases you are taught. 
Buck. Come sir, your finest airs and wisest words 

Cau never bend or break our quarrel's point. 
Edg. I told you I will have no feud with you, 

So do not force it on. 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 19 

Buck. First draw, aud tlieu depart to where you may. 
Craig. S'blood if it comes to steel, I'll steal away. Exit. 

Edg. Bar not my way ; pray, let me hence, iu peace. 
Buck. Then with your very sword, I'll beat you hence. 

{About to grasp it.) 
Edg. Rash fool, forbear! You, passion's basest slave. 

To what damnation would you drag us both ? 
Buck. Well, sir, defend yourself! {draws.) 

Edg. ]Make sure I shall. {draws also.) 

{At guard.) What boots to crush but one of Hydra's heads ? 

\Vould all her damned corruptiouists had stood 

Within my good arm's reach, then would I have 

A country yet ; I would have served them thus ! 

{They fight; BucJclaw^s sword flies from his grasp, and he falls 
on his knee.) 
Buck. The devil arms you, Eavenswood : you strike 

As if 3"0U meant my sword shall hit the moon. 

You know the bloody code of Scottish feuds ; 

Then follow suit, and upward send my soul ! 
Edg. Not ^Etna could do that : though hellward bound, 

I'll not let yon degrade my image : rise. 
Buck, {rises.) You won the throw; come draw the stakes: 

my life. 
Edg. Ill counselled trilier, keep, to mend it if you can. 
Buck. I'll try to do it ; But Lord Ravenswood, 

You strike like Vulcan in his crazy rage : 

Your blow benumbed me like a thunderbolt. 
Edg. You know me not, else you would have bewared : 

There is in me a power slow to move ; 

But once evoked, it grapples but to crush. 
Buck. Egad, I'll shift me hence beyond its reach. 

Let us be reconciled. 
Edg. As we have been, so shall we still remain: 

I love you none the better after this, 

Than ere I fought with you. 
Buck. Sir, I recant. 

Edg. No, sing it still ; I am a rebel to 

The government, the system and the creed 

That x)ampers villains and slights honest men. 
Enter Host, n-ho ivhispers to Bucklaw. 
Buck. I am tracked hither by the hounds of law : 

If not my friend, then be my savior still, 

Or else this life, which you presented me. 

Is but a forfeit gift : sir, I implore — 
Edg. The gate of Wolf's Crag opens to distress 

But to your plots let me be stranger still. 
Buck. My peril tears me hence, and I can give 

You only broken thanks, but it is here {2)oints to his breast). 

Exit with Host. 
Edg. How true this restless monitor within 

Approves himself! My quick elastic soul, 
^ That with its proper wings still upward flies, 

Can be dragged down but by the stranger ties ; 

And therefore let my soul be Argus eyed. 

That in her choice of mates she still be right ! Exit. 



20 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 2. 

Scene 11— The Hall in Wolfs Crag; A Thunderstorm. 
Caleb and Mysie. 

Cal. Pray, Mysie, pray no more to leave this earth : 

The Master says, it is uo vale of tears. 
Mys. The tongue's iiublest that taught it me as one, 

For it has made an autumn of my spring. 
Cal. Thus fate tricks women : you regret you had 

Your low'ring season ; some repine that in 

Their May of life they did not have their fall. 
Mys. Yet we all pray to go to Heaven. 
Cal. For that pray neither, since they'll have ujd there 

Another civil war : best tarry here 

Till it be over. Ha ! do you not hear 

How for artillery practice they have made 

A target of this castle ? Splash ! there goes 

Another capstone from the battlements. 
Mys. Alas ! my hopes are not so much for Heaven, 

As that the Master here be better housed 

Than in this tower, only lit for owls. 
Cal. {taps lier shoulder) That prayer's heeded: the celestial 
host 

Are even now at levelling down its walls, 

And who can tell, but that to-morrow night. 

The Legion devils with their pioneers 

Will raise a fortress here, of adamant, 

To spite their heavenly adversaries ? Whereby 

The Master gets a castle gratis f Eh f 
Mys. You're merry, Caleb, but I do not know : 

I am as wanted to this castle as 

The oyster to its shell. 
Cal, And when 'tis opened, what a savory, 

Delicious morsel we shall see in you ! 
Mys. To see, you rogue, is not to taste (tajjs his mouth.) 
Cal. When out of season. 

Well, when he brings this Keeper thief to terms 

And gets bis due, we too shall have our own. 
Mys. How so ? 

Cal. Why, get each other — we shall marry. 
Mys. Come, 

So long has been your term of grace, you're past 

All grace with me. 
Cal. Ha ! you'd be surer, had I left a pledge 

Of my affection ; but you showed so oft 

We were, that I forgot we were not wed. 
Mys. You men are most prexiosterous animals : 

Unmarried, you belie your single state. 

And wedded, you confound your marriage bond. 
Cal. Well I'll repair my fault." 

Mys. How know you, marriage then be still allowed f 
Cal. If not, we needs must do what is forbidden. 

For Man unmated, is but half a man, 

And joys unshared, are but the dregs of bliss. 



SC. 2.] IlAVENS\YOOD. 21 

Mys. Yet, you repent your former marriage ? 
Cal. But tell me, have you not perceived 

By its reflection iu the mirror of 

Our own transparent love, that Edgar too 

Has heen transformed like me ? That he too is 

Uxu — usurious — that he's in love ? 
Mys. Not he indeed ! he loves the world too much 

To fix his heart on one particular thing. 
Cal. Not if he'd find his mate ? 
Mys. No, rather say, 

If she find him, for she who'll be his wife 

Must meet him half the way. 
Cal. Then he'll die single, for the world gives proof, 

So long as woman's heart shall yield and rue, 

Dissembling wooers win more than the true. 

But hark! He's coming : quick look to the fire. ^o^i^MYSiE. 
Enter Edgar ; throivs off cloak, and steps to window. 
Edg. O Heaven! thus you fan my fev'rish soul; 

When Man oftends me. Nature soothes me ever : 

Be she in deigning or in frowning mood, 

I don't intrude — am not too much, with her. 

Hand me a chair — Another rumbling clap ! 

How through this breast the thunder leaps and rolls, 

And quickens me to front Eternity ! 
Cal. Here is a chair ; pray, Master, rest. 
Edg. When you behold the like of this, then know, 

It is the tempest of tlie Ravenswood ! 

Bid Mysie to prepare a bit of lunch. Exit Caleb. 

I'll heuce again, for in a storm like this, 

I and my ancestors hold conference. 

JRe-enter Caleb, icith Lunch. 
Cal. There's knocking at the gate. 
Edg. Go, open it. 

Cal. All of the house are in. 

Edg. (about to rise.) Nay, if you fear — 
Cal. It is not that ; but sir, I would not have 

A stranger spread abroad what here he's seen. 
Edg. Tush, your old whims about our humbleness ! 

What we enjoy, we own ; and by that right 

The universe is mine ; attend the gate. Exit Caleb. 

How excellent the world's duplicity ! 

They will profess a God born in a crib. 

And yet deny the man who lives in one ! 
{Re-enter Caleb u-iih Ashtox and Lucy, hotli hooded.) 
Cal. {to Ash.) You have before you Master Ravenswood. 

{to Edg.) The strangers say, they'll introduce them- 
selves. Exit. 
Edg. Be welcome hither, whether friend or foe. 
Ash. We have been overtaken— 
Edg. Pray, forbear ; 

The elements have been more eloquent 

In your excuse than tongue could be, unless 

An angel tell it in this huntress' guise. 



22 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 2. 

Ash. Yet, sootb, I bad designed this interview, 

Precipitated baply by tbe storm. 
Edg. Precipitated ? Tbeu, since unprepared, 

Retain your mask, and seem you still unknown ; 

Or bare your visage : do, as suits you best, 

ril know you as none other than my guest. 
Ash. Sir, to assure you, that I visit here. 

Not w ith one forward, and oue backward foot, 

ril doff this habit of the chase {unhoods himself.) 

Thus let the savior confront the saved. 
Edg. 'Tis not my sight reminds me there were two, 

{to Lucy) Eor by the gratefiU air you brought with you, 

I had descried the progeny of Heaven. 
Ash. Lucy, compose yourself ; take off your hood. 
Edg. Nay, urge it uot against her bashjfulness : 

What need we see the sun to be assured. 

It is its beam that cheers and quickens us ? 

What need we look upon the violet. 

To know, it is its scent that raptures us ? 

Fain would I do those gentle offices. 

Whose wont, from long disease, I have so much 

Outgrown, that in my own house I'm a guest. 
Enter Mysik. 

{to Mysie) Be you the Luna to attend this sun. 

For by her borrowed light you hence shall shine. 
Lucy, {to Edg.) Thus by the "kind reflection of the moon 

You still will have the vanished sun to shine. 

But in my almanac, 'tis now eclipse : 

So pray you. Moon, to hide the sun awhile. 
Mys. {to Lucy) Were but our castle not so poor ! 
Lucy. 'Twould bankrupt Croesus, did he purchase it 

At my appraisement. 
Mys. I am so glad it pleases you. 
LucY'. So much 

I would be put in some rehitionship : 

Could you not part >our time 'tween here and me ? 
Mys. If ] knew how. 
Lucy Come, we shall find a way. 

Exeunt Lucy, Mysie and Ashton. 
Edg. Were this a dream, it yet would be a bliss 

Unparagoned by aught my spirit knows ; 

But as this visit is a living fact, 

It hits beyond my fancy's highest dare. 
Re-enter Caleb. 

This room has held, this castle holds her yet ! 
Cal. It does ! It does ! Master, they are secure : 

I've locked the castle's gate : you are well served. 
Edg. Your self-praise makes me doubt. 
Cal. It's all the same : 

A smuggling brig lies in Wolf's Haven, cleared 
For France. The skipper will, for fifty pounds, 
Abduct the Keeper to a hostile port. 



SC. 2.] RAVENSAYOOD. 23 

Wlience for his ransom he shall render hack 

All the estates he rohhed your father of. 

Master! — Alas, he hears, but does not heed ! 
Edg. You jar a discord in the harmony, 

Now thrilling through my soul. 
Cal. (aside) That harmony ! 

Pray God, he be not in love ! 

(aloud) Seize him and see how quick he will disgorge, 

Ay, and give you that harmony to boot. 
Edg. You found my key, but do not let it sound : 

Like broken flowers, some conceptions lose 

The savor when expressed. But, since you will, 

Be turnkey still : go, and unlock the gates. 
Cal. O Sir, the devil must be fought with fire. 
Edg. Do not believe it, for the devil still 

Has most of it ; yea, and can ply it best 

Remember this, and what you've done, undo. Exit Caleb. 

I am alone and yearn for her return, 

If but to re-assure me, she is here. 
Be-enter Ashton. 
Ash. If now the Master deigns, we shall resume 

Where, at the Mermaid's Well, we made a pause. 
Edg. My Lord, as then the time, so now the place 

Is all unsuited for that conference. 
Ash. Pray, lit it then, for in my soul I vowed, 

That this day's sun should not go down, without 

It saw me fuJly reconciled with you. 
Edg. Your v/ish is echoed in my heart, but here 

It cannot be : you are my visitor, 

And still the guest must feel the host's duress, 

However hospitable he may be. 
Ash. It is as far from me to feel, as 'tis 

For you to exercise that influence. 

Ask what you will, I yield, for to my bond 

You have my signature iid blank. 
Edg. Alas! what reparation can you make 

To my wronged father? Speak it softly, sir! 

There where you stand, he breathed forth his last : 

It was the direst curse upon his foe. 

The air of Heaven ever bore aloft. 

Do what you may : could you give thousand worlds. 

No benefit accrues to him : he's dead ! 
Ash. It can ! It will ! for still he lives in you, 

Or rather, as jou were my savior. 

Be I, instead your father : be my son! (gives hand.) 
Edg. My lord, you venture on the dearest tie. 

That this side Heaven is vouchsafed to Man. 

If it comes from your heart, 'twill twine to mine 

With such a firm, tenacious ligament. 

As not the tear of even death shall rend. 

But if your proifer is but tongue begot, 

It had been better for us both, that I 

Had then withheld my ai|;n, and that dumb brute 

Had tossed your soul into eternity ! 



24 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 3. 

Ash. Sir, if I falter, if I fail in this, 

Be then the retribution visited, 

Not on myself alone, but all my house, 

Whereof, dear Master, henceforth you are one. 

Command, dispose of me, and all of mine ; 

This only once, let me prevail with you : 

Keturn with us to Castle Ravenswood. 
Edg. That were to turn from all my cheerishe d Past ! 

And yet 'tis bootless to continue it: 

If Nature had designed us to go back. 

Instead of forward, these our eyes and feet 

Were posted in our rear, not in our front. 
Ash. Sir, to a third this will be trebble joy : 

I'll tell my Lucy ; we shall hence at once. Exit. 

Re-enter Caleb. 
Cal. Oh Master, do not go ! Remember now 

That prophecy, the Highland minstrel sung : 

"When its last Lord to Ravens wood shall ride, 

" And claim a dying maiden as his bride, 

" Then in his father's hall his blood shall run, 

" And there his race shall end as it begun. 
Edg. Why, Caleb, did I wish a x)rophecy. 

That one would iit my heart : it gives my blood 

More than I ask : the Castle Ravenswood; 

And as to owning of a dying maid ? 

Great Nature wills, a maid die in the bride. 
Cal. But, Master, tell me, is your harmony 

Not from, — does slie not play? (mimics as on piano) 
Edg. O Man she sweeps 

The chords, that sound the music of the spheres ! 
Cal. Then Master, never mind the proj)hecy : 

If it be that she plays, you must be safe. 

She is a winsome lassie — and here, she gave me these. 

{slips some gold pieces into his hand) 
Edg. But surely not to give to me again ? 
Cal. Up there are servants too : civility 

Comes then but freely when 'tis bought. 
Edg. I carry money with me. 
Cal. But this alreadj'^ used to give away. 
Edg. Then be it so ; I rather spend your cash 

Than more words now. Good Caleb, fare you well. Exit. 
Cal. He's gone, and down the stairs with arrow flight 

He's after her. Thus woman shall maintain 
Dominion over man : the last of us 

Will be as much an Adam as the first. Exit. 

ACT III. 

SCENJL I — Before Alice's Hut; Alice seated beneath a iveeping birch. 
Enter to her Edgar, Lucy and Henry. 

Alice, {to Lucy) But now a fawn stole by: it did not tread 
So light as you my child. You are, I trow, 
Elated by some happy news ? 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 25 

Lucy. I am indeed, as were I borue ou wiuga — 

This festal spring, and oh! — To witness all 

How fain I'd let you have my sight ! 
Alice. I see, my Lucy, with your very eyes. 
Lucy. Dear Alice, sooth ; you look through memory 

Still with the eyes of youth. 
Alice. I'd own no other, 

For then the world is at its best. Bat tell, 

Who comes with you ? It is as if he stepped 

Across its threshold from the Past ! I'm sure 

He's not your father. 
Lucy. Why not he ? 
Alice. Ah, that peculiar, haughty step I've heard 

Was owned by only one, but he is dead ! 

Yea, were it not too strauge, I would affirm, 

It is the son of Allan Raveuswood! 
Edg. My cherished nurse ! It is your heart, not ear, 

That has thus wonderfully recognized 

Your foster child : I'm Edgar Raveuswood. 
Alice. I've parted with amazement long ago. 

But now, despite your own av^owal and 

My cunning ear, I'll not believe— come, let 

This knowing hand of old, pass o'er your face. 

{Edgar sits hesUle her.) 

It is too true ! these lofty lines of pride 

Agree well with the bold and soulful tone. 

And yet ! my only hope, to meet with you. 

Is broken by the grief to meet you here. 
Edg. (rises) Where else ? I must to you ; you will not come 

to me. 
Alice. Remember Edgar, oh, remember well 

The oath we all have taken : they who left 

Shall not return, and they who staid, shall not 

Depart, till Castle Raveuswood has been 

Restored to him, whose name it bears. 
Edg. I've broken with the Past and all its hate. 
Alice. You've broken with your oath, whereof you brought 

The scourge along, and yet you know it not ! 
Lucy. The Master, Alice, is my father's guest ! 
Alice. Indeed ! And is he so ? Your father's guest ! 

(to lierself) Oh, forfeit Lucy ! Fated Edgar : Both fore- 
doomed ! 
Henry. Come, Master, see ! I found an owlet's nest ! 

(draws Edgar aside.) 
Lucy. I charge you, Alice, in this terrible strain. 

Dp not proceed ! or if you will, then choose 

Another time. Oh, do not intf^rpose ! 

You would not rob me him, my only onef 
Alice. Fond child, you do not own him yet. 
Lucy. Oh, help me win him ! Now or never prove, 

As what I've cherished you ! 
Alice. I surely do it — by denying you. 
Lucy. Alice, my God ! How I have been deceived ! 



26 RAVENSWOOD. [AOT 3. 

Alice, {taking her hand) No cliild : now most of all, I'm true 

to you. 
Lucy. Oli, tiien be merciful ! 
Alice. I shall be so, 

Wherefore let me have private speech with him. 
Lucy. What ? Would you pass upon my life and death, 

And I not present even f 
Alice. Do you not trust him f 
Lucy. Oh, ask it of the blest, if they trust God ! 
Alice. Then be content : from him you'll take my words 

More kindly then from me. 
Lucy. Alas! you said, I came here like a fawn; 

Now, like a death-struck hind, I make awaj^. 
Alice. Be but a little patient. 
Lucy, You were so reverent, I looked on you. 

As one already minist'rin^ in Heaven, 

And now? -Oh God! 
Alice. You'll learn, that I have done its office. 
Lucy. No, never, Alice, if you draw not back 

This fatal arrow ! Henry, come ; we'll leave 

The Master here ; she'd speak with him alone. 

(to Edg.) Upon our way, we'll take a rest beside 

The Mermaid's Well ; (aside) beware, lest she estrange — 

I mean — bewitch your soul. Exit with Henry. 

Edg. (lookwg after Lucy.) What here remains, is but an 
empty vase : 

My life and being go along with you ! 
Alice. Recall those words, before you learn their weight : 

They are your destiny ! 
Edg. If they were not 

I'd not have spoken them. 
Alice. First know, then own. 

Edg. Then give me your iutelligence. 
Alice. A tale like mine should bear its proper voice : 

'Tis not for tongue to tell. 
Edg. Still give it speech : 

Whate'er you harbor, let it leap from you 

As 'twere the gladsome thunder from the clouds. 

But do not utter what you have to say. 

Like robbers do their booty ; even now 

You muttered, fated, and I know not what. 

As you named me. 
Alice. And Lucy ! 

Edg. Why do you couple us so darkly ! 
Alice. For 

One dread fatality enshrouds you both. 
Edg. Wherefore, and by whose fault? 
Alice. The fault of many, but your own the most. 
Edg. In what have I transgressed ? 
Alice. Even wherein you thought to bless yourself: 

In saving Ashton. 
Edg. Have Heav'u and Hell exchanged their places ? 
Alice. This earth stands to them as it ever did. 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 27 

Edg. Theu is the saviug of a human life 

No trespass ? 
Alice. The object makes it one. 
Edg. With you, but not with Heaven. 
Alice. Woukl 'twere with me, aud not with Heaven, whose 

Dread vengeance you have intercepted! 
Edg. Think you, I'd couple God with vengeance ? 
Alice. Then call it retribution, which shall live 

So long as men transgress, and that's forever. 
Edg. I thwarted but an accident. 
Alice. An accident ? The guise for God's design ! 

The score of years I dwell here, Ashton came 

Not near, save ouce : to learn your parts from me. 

He left in dreadful consciousness, that he 

Must yield his forfeit life 

Edg. When I appeared, to save the culprit, and 

To slay his destined executioner 

Alice. Whereby you doomed yourself his fellow victim!' 

Edg. I too saved Lucy ; speak : was that a trespass too ? 

Alice. It was : her death had been the happier. 

Edg. So had been mine. 

Alice. Then Heaven help you both ! 

Edg. I charge you, Alice, to be plain with me : 

Disclose the worst and I will cope a worse. 

Within my bosom springs such potent bliss, 

As turns, whate'er you pour, into itself. 

Is it some taint in her you'd warn against ? 
Alice. Have you seen aught amiss f 
Edg. Sooth, Alice, when my heart rose to my eyes 

They looked indeed for them : they were not there. 

But oh ! full soon I found, 'twas in her soul 

She bore her kindred's wings. 
Alice. Yea, suns may have their spots, but she has none. 
Edg. You draw a flaming iron 'cross my heart ! 

Then why do you so dreadly warn me back ? 

Do I love unrequited ? 
Alice. What? You, all eyes and ears have not construed 

The longing, yielding converse of a maiden's heart ? 
Edg. In love, I take no hint : it is too dread, 

Too hallowed to my soul. 
Alice. Know then, she loves you so, had she not been, 

She were an angel now. 
Edg. Unsay those words, or say them t)nce again ! 
Alice. Fond Man, if 'twere not true, my saying it 

A thousand times, would never make it so. 
Edg. Has she confessed it ? 

Alice. I might say so, but that she'll do to you. 
Edg. Enough ! That seals my fate ! Why stay I here, 

Away from her ? 
Alice. Yet tarry, Edgar. 

Edg. What's to hinder us ? 

Alice. The worst of all, and that you have to learn. 
Edg. You heard from Lucy, I'm her father's guest. 



28 RAVENS WOOD. [ACT 3. 

Alice. So have been many, but yet they never got 

To be his sons-in-law. 
Edg. But none of them 

Did he affiliate as he did me. 
Alice. Alas ! trust not his tongue : it buds profuse, 

But bears no fruit. 
Edg. Remember, now the slip of gratitude 

Is grafted on his soul. 
Alice. Where it will die : 

His heart is shifting like the desert's sand. 
Edg. You damn him from report, as erst I did. 
Alice. Woe be to you, when you shall know him as 

He knows himself. 
Edg. Concede, his love is sham — his fear is true. 
Alice. Grant more : that he redeem what to your hope 

He pledged, yet then 

Edg. Then, Alice, I repeat : 

What hinders us ? 
Alice. Oh ! hear it since you must : 

The dog-star in yon lovers' firmament 

Is Lady Ashton. 
Edg. Oh ! that malignant Earth must interpose 

Between them. Heaven has together fit ! 
Alice. 'Tis she, who wrought the ruin of your house. 
Edg. Alas ! my father ! 

Alice. And all because he scorned her proffered hand. 
Edg. For my own mother ! There ! you've broached my all : 

Mystery of this our being here ! 
Had he accepted it, I had not been ! 

Alice. Not for her vengeance to descend upon. 

Edg. Her spite is past : she too is reconciled. 

Alice. No : sooner shall the damned be raised to Heaven, 

Than you shall be admitted to her grace. 
Edg. But sure for Lucy's sake, if not my own. 
Alice. Be undeceived : more brute than brutes, she is 

One of those hellowned mothers, who destroy — 

Oh ! have me not to horrify your ear — 

Poor Lucy owes her birth and life to me ! 
Edg. My preservation hallowed Lucy ! Speak : 

Where is your i)ity, where your woman's heart, 

That you, who have beeu thus, can turn against 

The motherless ? 
Alice. Alas ! my children both I 

1 am not of the Fates, who spin the web ; 

I can but teach you how to slip the meshes. 
Edg. O speak, my Oracle, my Prophetess ! 

What shall I do ? 
Alice. See Lucy never more. 
Edg. Bid me keep from myself. 
Alice. I charge you by that goal you hunger for : 

By your posthumous fame ! 
Edg. It is a cheat : 

I'd have eternal fame, or I'd have none, 

And that no man shall own ; no, there's no god. 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 29 

Or fabled or revealed, whose credit stands 

Five thousand years. 
Alice. By Heav'n aud Earth, and All that is between! 
Edg. The Universe is cleft atwain. 

And wedges in my heart : there lies the out. 
Alice. Then by your Mission aud Eternity ! 
EdG" Ha ! now you rouse the echo in my soul, 

Whose goad to action is the love of Man, 

To me now sacred in the love of one ! 
Alice. Loved from your birth you must be loving still ; 

But oh ! did you account your suffering f 
Edg. Account it ? God ! I feel it in the proof: 

Humanity is still a heresy ; 

Yet I confidingly embrace the world, 

But like that image of the Middle Age, 

It strikes its secret daggtrs in my breast! 
Alice. Though you be tortured, be adjured by me : 

Oh I be not sacrificed I 
Edg. You bode of me. 

As if I were a lamb in slaughterpen. 

And must abide the drag-out and the blow ? 
Alice. My inner vision sickens to behold 

What i may not portray. When you're engulfed 

In that catastrophe you hazard now, 

I'll be your herald to the other world. 
Edg. There are more awful moments in our life. 

Than coming in, and going out of it. 

And this is one. I must come to myself: 

Alice, farewell I 
Alice. Think, 'tis your mother lays 

This hand upon your head : Oh heed me, heed ! 
Edg. Through all eternity, but now I cannot : 

Farewell, until we meet again, {going.) 
Alice, {going to door.) In spirit, but in body never more 

{in door) Oh Edgar, take, oh take the other path ! 

Pay not the curse, wherein, the devil for 

Their dower, holds the Ashtons in his pledge. 

Mark well : before to-morrow's sun descends, 

You'll have the earnest of my prophecy ! 
Edg. Were it itself, I must go — there. 
Alice. Oh would I were the despot of the world 

For but one day ! 
Edg. Ha 1 to what end ? 
Alice. To fetter you in adamantine chains, 

Away from Lucy, her from you, and both 

From your destruction ! 
Edg. He who has willed the Despot and Destruction, 

To quell their power, placed a stronger here. 

By your own kindness be reminded nurse, 

A loveless life, is at its best a curse. Exeunt. 

3* 



30 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 3. 

ScENCE II — MermakVs Well; Lucy seated on a rock, unleafs a 
dandelion. 

Lucy. He loves me not — lie loves — lie loves me not : 

Alas ! I have but three more leaves, and dare 

Not try it further : let me calculate 

How they will end ? Ah me ! I'm so confused, 

I cannot make it out, yet know I must, {plucks again) 

He does — does not — he does ! he does love me ! 

Oh sweetest, only flower of Paradise (kisses it) 

Could you but take these lips, and tell me so ! 

Alas ! How fond am I ? How fond of all 

The world, I fancy as his confidant ! 

There is no tree, no rock, I do not question, 

And still the answer conies but from my heart : 

I feel, I know, because I love him so, 

That he must love me too : And yet, poor me ! 

Loved he— he would not stay ! Can Alice then? 

How drear it clouds before my eyes ! My iieart ! 

Though fear is bitter, hope is sweeter still! 

My God, he comes ! Ah now, how shall I act ? 

80 dearly, sweetly would I have him know, 

And yet I dare not tell ! Kind Heaven, now 

Let me find some mysterious avenue. 

Besides my organs, to communicate 

What heart intends to heart ! Sure, he must see — 
Enter Edgar. 

I fear, that to the Masrer, Alice's hut 

Has more attractions than the Mermaid's Well, 

For fatal is this Spring to them, who come 

To woo — its mermaids and its water-nymphs. 
Edg. So tells the legend of my ancestors, 

But it does not relate, than any yet 

Have rued the vision of an augel here. 

For I'm the first so blest of all my kin. 
Lucy. Who were no kindred to those sons of God, 

Who for its daughters visited this earth. 
Edg. For they are fairer than their mates above. 

But sooth to say, I love this spot so well, 

That if my disembodied Spirit may, 

'Twill surely visit this Elysium, 

For it was here I stocked my memory, y 

The garner of my soul, with such a store, 

As gladdeus her for all eternity, 
Lucy. Ah, then it was the person, not the x)lace 

That kept you hence ? 
Edg. Since I felt reverence, I have Avorshipped Alice, 

But knowing now, that she is intimate 

With one, to me the dearest on the earth, 

I love her second only to that one. 
Lucy. O sir, I am not cuuuiug to construe, 

Nor is it in my nature to presume. 

Or take for granted what is unavouched — 



SC. 2.] RAVENSWOOD. 31 

Edg. (aside) How in our faults we are cougenial ! 
Lucy. 'Tis true, I think, reflect and ruminate — 

Oh sir, proceed : a half and doubtful tale 

Were worse than none at all ; keep nothing back : 

I feel, intensely feel, the time has come — 
Edg. (tales her hand) Yea, it has come, and with a treasure 
fraught. 

That tide of times shall never brag again. 
Lucy. O Edgar, speak, speak on, and do not pause : 

My bosom echoes what it dare not sound. 
Edg. Yet listen Lucy : Mice told me all ; 

That was the charm, that held me to her hut. 
Lucy. O Heaven, true! I did betray myself! 

What must you think of me ? Yet, God be thanked ! 

Now it IS out, it has the breath of Life ! 
Edg. Amen, to that ! 

She warned me of this crisis in our life, 

And I have passed it with a wary soul : 

For he's a wretch, who ^ill not meditate 

Upon the consequences of his deed. 

Mj^ dread alternative has been the choice 

To never see you more, or front an ordeal — 
Lucy (Lays her hand on him, «<? detaining.) 

Oh do not leave — you shall not part from us, 

Unless of me, you'll make a sacrifice. 
Edg. (takes other hand) And of myself! Oh never dream, 
that I 

Could quit where you abide, for on this earth, 

There are more Edens, than what A-dam lost. 
Lucy. My Edgar ! now my own, my only Edgar ! 

Fain would I tell you whence my love has sprung ; 

How it has rooted, thrived and bloomed, how by 

The blasts of doubt it has been wrenched and torn, 

Till this blest moment it has ripened in 

The calm assurance, that it is returned! 
Edg. My own ! amongst its thousand millions, 

Kind Heaven lets the destined ones still find 

Each other by its guide within, 
Lucy. Oh, therefor be it ever thanked ! In sooth, 

I know not whether 'twas from gratitude. 

For having saved ray life, but since my eyes 

Beheld you at this Well, 'twas only you 

My soul has dwelt on in my thoughts and dreams. 
Edg. And mine forgot all else, save Lucy's name ; 

Oh ! kindred are our souls, as were our hopes ; 

And blest are we, who in this wilderness 

Have found the voice responsive to our cry ! 
Lt'Cy. The world is but an empty casket. 

Till Love has set its gem. Oh, now this earth 

Is Paradise again ! 
Edg. Yea, fair's this love apparelled world, and yet 

In all this infinite of miracles, 

The fairest is a woman in her prime, 



32 RAVENSwooD. [Act 3. 

And sucli, my Lucy, do I own iu you, 

The masterpiece of Heaven's wondrous hand! 
Li cy. Oh ! Man, how I do love you ! 
Edg. Yea, cling to me ! 

And 'gainst the world I'll hold you by this hoop, 

Which binds the King and beggar still alike ; 

It is my mother's bridal ring ; let it 

Repeat its hallowed symbolship in you. (puts it on.) 
Lucy. My Edgar, mark the rare coincidence : 

My owning this is since the birth of my 

Young love for you : my father gave it me 

The day you saved our lives, and bade me then 

To give it him who should betroth my heart. 
Edg. If that were hap, then were the world by chance; 

That dual daj", on which was sown prodigious seed, 

Whereof we harvest now. 
Lucy. And as to mine, 

It yields this to your baud. Q>wts it on his finger.) 
Edg. Where 'twill avoach its truth, 

If hence I doubt, that I but dreamt this bliss ; 

'Tis too angelic to aftirm itself. 
Lucy. My ecstacy, being known alone in Heaven, earth 

Affords no name to tell it by — 

Could but the sweetness of this moment's spell 

Dilate itself through all our coming time ! 
Edg. My Love, we shall retain it through our life, 

For Memory can lock the wheels of Time, 

And let us revel where we now are rushed. 

Come, Lucy, now we have each other won. 

Let us devise how to secure ourselves 

Against the Future, (draws her to him on the rock.) 
Lucy. My Edgar, fear not ; all's as well, as 'twere 

Already done. You have not only saved. 

You have beatified my father's life. 

He wills, and in advance has blest our bond. 
Edg. But so will not your mother. Lucy, heed : 

If man was ever cautioned, I have been 

'Gainst her remorseless hatred: she's the rock 

We both must cross before we reach our haven. 
Lucy. Ah! Edgar! do not doubt, my father's will 

Shall pilot us, so we may safely pass. 
Edg. Best to ourselves trust we our safety ; 

Then, if that warning should be veiified, 

Be yon, for once her like in stubbornness. 

But in all else remain still as you are. 
Lucy. Design me, Edgar, to what shape you will, 

I am as wax to yon. (Moot) rises.) 
As I by you. 

The ocean sways not by yon potent moon. (Raven drops.) 

(shrieks) Oh ! Edgar, see ! What tlutters on the ground ? 

How I am frightened ! You are startled too ! 

Great Heaven grant, this be no augury! 
Edg, 'Tis not propitious, and not ominous, 
nd yet 'tis ill, iu that it costs a life. 



SC. 2.] EAVENSWOOD. 33 

Lucy. Ah ! see how pitiful he looks for help ; 

Quick, draw the arrow, save him if you can. 
Edg. It is too late : he is already dead. 

But this is singular and strange indeed ; 

The raven is the wariest bird, and none 

Have I yet known, who would abide the aim — 

And this so near as if to be our friend ! 

But here his slayer comes. 

I^nter Henry ictth a crossbow. 
Henry. That was a hit ! 

Now, Master, think you, I can shoot a deer ? 
Edg. No doubt, you can ; but if you will persist 

To arrow all the ravens in the woods, 

You shall destroy the sponsors of our house. 

How would you like your own god-father killed '/ 
Henry. And if he were I still should keep my name. 
Edg. So you care no more for your sponsor, than 

You do for mine? But can you answer for 

The deprivation of the raven's young? 

Who hence shall sate the callows' hungry throats ? 
Henry. I'll find their nest — but as to feeding them ? 

There, Lucy can provide for them: she is 

The foster-mother to all orphaned brutes. 
Edg. Well, find them Henry : 'twill amend your fault, 

And to commemorate your archery, (plucks some feathers) 

I'll wear these feathers in my hat. 
Lucy. And I will keep these blood-stains in my dress. 
Henry. Our mother brought you many nicer ones. 
Lucy. W"hy, Henry, she has not returned? 
Henry. Be sure she has, and I am sent for you. 

She says, the news she brought, shall make you proud ; 

She's come to take you to the court. 
Lucy. And, pray sir, what shall I do at the court ? 
Henry. Why, court, and to be courted — bartered off; 

For that, they say, are ladies taken there. 

All London is already on its knees. 

To compliment the Pride of Laramermoor. 
Lucy. The Pride of Lammermoor ? 
Henry. Ay, by that name all Windsor speaks of you, 

Who ought to thank that Captain Craigengelt 

For christ'ning you so lovely. 
Edg. Ah ! in our augury he's the evil bird. 

(to Henry) But tell him, if in future he give names. 

My hand shall lesson him in sponsorship. 
Henry. I'll run ahead to say you're coming home. Exit. 
Lucy. I know him not, yet loathe him for his name. 
Edg. And rightly, LoA'^e, your instinct counsels you ; 

These double tidings, paltry in themselves. 

Are in their combination ominous. 

And yet, were there no serpent in it, ours 

Would be no Paradise. 
Lucy. And be assured. 

That I shall profit by our mother Eve. 



34 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 4. 

EdCt. Heed but ray words, aud you are better warned. — 

You must to court ? 
Lucy. At Wolfe's Crac.-. 
Edg. No, London, Love. 
Lucy. As Lady Ravenswood. 
Edg. Ob ! you are mine, as I do owu myself! 

Had Heav'n made you to my prayers, you 

Could not be better fitted to my soul. 

Who has forgotten all, save care for you : 

What most we prize, we still fear most to lose. 
Lucy. I have one heart and troth for ill or good ; 

There's but one Lucy aud one Ravenswood. 
Picture. 

ACT IV. 

Scene First. — The Hall in Ravenswood Castle. Enter Ashton 
and Lady ; she locks the door and takes the key. 

Ash. Why this precaution ? 

Lady. To teach a huckster in its sanctity, 

That I still prize a household's privacy. 

(shoics key) Sir, let this warn you who is mistress here, 

The next time you presume to introduce 

Your daughter as the lady of the house. 
Ash. a simple slip of tongue ! 
LiADY. A sinister confession of your guilt ; 

Your tongue did but anticipate the crime. 
Ash. Of what f 
Lady. Tbe marriage of our daughter with this thing, 

That answers to the name of Ravenswood. 

The bankrupt whelp of our prostrated foe. 
Ash. I can conceive the marriage — not the crime. 
Lady. You would have learnt it in its punishment, 

But for my fortunate return. 
Ash. Forsooth, we waited for your coming back. 
Lady. To be accessory to your overt act 

Of treason to our house ? 
Ash. Before the fact, if you will have it so. 
Lady. A vile untruth ! You fain would have contrived 

My absence to a tT-ap, in hope that then 

I would abide Avhat could not be undone. 
Ash. You have no proof of this. 
Lady. Unless your ord'ring of the bans be it ; 

'Tis sometimes well that Rumor has a tongue. 
Ash. a villain's mouth owns this, who e'er it be. 
Lady. 'Tis Captain Craigengelt : a worthy man. 
Ash. a worthless knave : if you'll conspire with liars, 

You needs must be infected with their breath. 
Lady. It is not so obnoxious as the man's 

In whom the father and the pander join. 
Ash. This is too mucli ; I have encouraged them, 

And when you know it all, you'll do so too : 

Abide this love awhile : see how 'twill fare. 



SC. 1] RAVENS WOOD. 35 

Lady. Are you turned idiot thus to triffle with 

A thing- you never knew : a woman's heart ? 
Ash. Then stay we neutral ; Lucy shall decide. 
Lady. I'd rather leave a serpent with a child, 

Then trust a nioonish maiden with her heart ; 

One sad experience is enough for me ; 

Go and apprise this Ravenswood, we need 

His room for other visitors. 
Ash. Are you possessed ? 
Lady. Of such a firm resolve, 

As not your reas'ning shall disown me of. 
Ash. What ? I do that the savages disdain ? 
Lady. You prove that you are none by caring for 

The welfare of your family. 
Ash. Whom you would damn with such a heinous sin, 

That Satan would disown our fellowship. 
Lady. So do I Ravenswood ; I rather brook 

A viper or a pest infected rag 

Within my house, than this forbidden man. 
Ash. The savior of mine and Lucy's life ! 
Lady. Infatuated man ! How do you know, 

But that you were the target for the ball, 

W^hich by miscarriage struck the bigger beast ? 

I'd put it to the proof: what cause had he 

To come with gun upon another's ground ? 
Ash. How quick a heav'n can be perverted to 

A hell! 
Lady. My lord, how will you T Nay, if you stay dumb, 

I'll take no answer for an answer too. 
Ash. Propose whate'er alternative you will 

— As that, I drop the Master by degrees — 

I'll do it, but to bid him leave my house, 

Is what I will not, what I cannot do. 
Lady. Sir, either he, or I shall quit the house ; 

This my alternative ; now take your choice. 
Ash. In God's name then ! If on my benefactor 

You will commit this infamy, I can 

Not hinder you beneath our common roof. 

But ere you do it, heed ! A spot, that's once 

Defiled, invi es polhition to its end. 
Lady. 'Tis you, who fouled it, by inviting him ; 

Now see to it, that it be purged again. — 

You will not ? Are not you the household's head * 
Ash. You will not let me be it for our best, 

And so, I shall not be it for our worst. 
Lady. Be then the vindication of our honor 

My task again, as it has ever been, (sits down and writes.) 
Ash. What since our marriage have I never done 

I do it now ! (kneels) 

My wife ! my Margaret ! 

Upon my knees I beg of you : desist ! 

'Tis in my very heart you dip the x^oint ; 

'Tis with its blood you write ! 



3G RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 4. 

Lady. So much the better : haply I shall drain 

Its vein of cowardice, {unlocks the door and rings.) 
Ash. (rises) Be yours the blame ; I wash my hands of this. Exit 
Lady. Best lave them iu your tears, {sarcastically.) 
Enter Servant. 
Without a momeut's loss, deliver this 
Unto the person known as Ravenswood. 
Serv. Mean you the Master, Madam I 
Lady. The Keeper's master, anybody's master, 

Your master too, if you will have him so. Exit Servant. 
This check will warn him never to usurp 
The one prerogative I will not share : 
The mother who will let the father choose 
Her daughter's husband is an arrant fool. 

Enter Marquis with billet. 
My lord, you come to broach no pleasant theme. 
Athol. Then it is trne, this is your hand ? ,^ 
Lady. And sir, 

It signed my mind. You speak, my lord, aa if 
I would deny my deed ? 
Athol. Forsooth, I hope 

That by undoing, you'll disown your wrong. 
Lady. There is no wrong, 'til we confess it such, 

And that I ne'er shall do. 
Athol. Your pardon, Lady, 

Had I known such to be your rule of action — 
Lady. Methinks, you learnt it to your profit, for 
It sometimes makes an English Minister, 
To keep a rival from the Keepership. 
Athol. {hows) I'll rest your debtor still, but for your anger ? 
Come, Lady Ashton, for a son-in-law, 
You might look fnrther, and fare worse, than with 
My nephew Ravenswood. 
Lady. So might my lord ; 

For if my gossips served me truly, he 
Is blest with marriageable daughters too. 
Athol. I am no brokerin my daughters' hands; 

I leave that to themselves and Lady Athol. 
Lady. Aha, my lord ! that is your Lady's business ? 
Then deign to leave the disposition of 
Her daughter's hand to Lady Ashton too — 
And let your kin shine in a Premier's beams, 
But in my house he lights not Hymen's torch. Exit. 

Athol. No ; may he not, and may no other man ! 
For in your hand, it is a brand from Hell, 
Though 'fore two angels to the altar borne. 
Enter Edgar. 
EdCt. If you are kin of mine, avoid this place, 
Unless you'll be contaminated with 
The shame that's cast on me. 
Athol. I've tasted it, and may I get it's fill. 
If I stay longer, than to speak with you. 



SC. 1.] KAVENSWOOD. 37 

Edg. This malice shames the fiend they learnt it from : 

Not satisfied to rob this castle from 

The father, but they here must gloat upon 

The contumely of the beggared sou ! 
Athol. And being so, you should have kept away. 
Edg. O Sir ! let him account why 1 am here. 

Sir Ashton come, and kiss this hand again. 

Once more, call me your son, and briug that bond, 

You signed in blank ; I'll fill it now with your 

Commitment to the lowest depths of Hell! 
Athol. Oh ! have no care; he'll not appear. 
Edg. I'm fain to think, God took him at his word, 

And made him show without what he's within ; 

A monster of such black ingratitude, 

That from his visage, Satan's self would stand 

Aghast ! 
Athol. Though she did perpetrate this infamy, 

Yet shall Sir Ashton smart for it. 
Edg. You foul your tongue to name the shameful fraud, 

Who got his manhood on a false pretense, 

And nosv unmasks himself a woman's slave, 

A damned, uxorious puppet other whims. 

Oh! that these shams, who backslide on their word, 

Should be permitted by the upright world, 

To prostitute the noble name of man ! 
Athol. Enough of them ; I'd now speak of yourself. 
Edg. Proceed : you have the ear of Kavenswood. 
Athol. You once disdained an offer I did make, 

And bade me broach no charge in politics, 

Save 'twere an honest service for the State : 

I now have such a one. 
Edg. And have selected me, because I am 

Your nephew ? If you have, I'll none of it ; 

This nepotism is our country's curse. 
Athol. In you 'tis practiced in its utmost need. 

For on the mission, I entrust you with, 

To Germany, depend its peace and war. 
Edg. Oh ! be it war ! Chaotic war ! And let 

Its purifying thunder shake the world, 

Until all placemen in the commonwealth, 

Are settled by the standard of their worth. 
Athol. War in its season, but the country's mood 

Now craves for peace. 
Edg. Her palate shall be humored, 

However the digestion foul her stomach. 
Athol. Then haste to start, for you must hence at once. 
Edg. Yea, verily I must ! And how I must ! 

Yet, if the earth between us burst atwain, 

I'll right me here, and if it end me not, 

May then a whirlwind bear us from this den. 
Athol. She comes upon your wish : I yield my place ; 

Be wisely brief; we start together hence. Exit. 

Enter LuOY, rushing into his arms. 
4 



38 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 4. 

Lucy. My Edgar! Even tins is possible! 

Oh ! in this dreadfnl interval, I have 

Endnred the doomsday's horrors of suspense ; 

But now I have you, I am with the blest ! 
Edg. My Lucy, trust our mutual hearts with all; 

For what they once have drawn, they have the strength 

To hold for aye, 
Lucy. Then let us look on this 

As but a horrid dreaiu. 
Edg. We'd wrong ourselves if we did deem it more : 

It is the utterer of base coin that's shamed, 

Not he who throws it back. 
Lucy. Ignore it, Love ! 

Edg. Oh! heed it, Lucy, in our sense : it is 

That earnest Alice warned me of, and now 

It posts my nature with a giant's grasp 

To face the sequel's woise. 
Lucy. Oh ! let it come ! 

When I'm with you my sense ot fear is dead. 

My Edgar, for my mother's hatred, sure, 

Tou do not love me less ? 
Edg. Were all the mothers in the world but yours, 

And were they worse than this, I'd love you all 

The more. The tiger-dam defends her young 

Against the sire ; but hapless more than they, 

Your foes are your unnatural parents both. 
Lucy. Oh ! Edgar, had I been aware, she should 

Have ordered both of us, to quit the house. 
Edg. And so she did, for Love, are we not one ? 
Lucy. Oh ! true ! With you, I too was bidden hence 

Bui. do not go. 
Edg. My Lucy, here I burn upon the stake ; 

If I remain, I am consumed with spite, 

And if I go, my heart strings shall be cut, 

That tie me where you are. 
Lucy. Oh ! who shall part us ? I will go with you 

To Wolfe's crag or to l.ondon, where you will. 
Ent&r Maid. 
Maid. Miss Lucy, Lady Ashton bids you cease 

All conference with him, who's ordered hence. 
Lucy. Tell her, that in this brunt, I shall receive 

No orders, save delivered by herself. Exit Maid. 

Edg. We shall go to the continent, to where 

I've entered on a public charge. 
Lucy. The farther hence, the nearer to our home. 

Ee-enter Servant, cautiously. 
Serv. My Master, pardon me for warning you 

Against a violence, I cannot name, 

Not knowing of its like. 
Edg. Say on : t deprecate her favor now 

More than her hate. 
Serv. She means such execrable contumely, 

That all her men refused, whereon she hired 

Its executioners from the public road. 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 39 

Edg. Tliauks for your warning ; wait mv coming out. 

Exit Serv. 

The sheer audacity of wickedness, 

Which needs bnt be confronted, and it shrinks 

Back to its nothingness. 
Lucy. Whate'er befall, with you I'll share the worst. 

My Love, what will you do ? 
Edg. What shall I not do, in this love at bay? 

That Mau alone is Man, who knows and does 

What every niinnte at his hand demands ; 

But, Lucy, sooth, my prompter shall be this; (lisaes her.) 

And if in action, I'm the least amiss 
Enter Craigengelt. 

Then let this devil start his imps to hiss. 

Sir, spare you tongue : I know the message from 

Its bearer. 
Craig. Unless you'd squander the three-minutes, which 

The Lady grants j^ou to leave Lucy and 

This Castle, you had better suifer me — 
Edg. Will you avoid ? (Craigengelt retreats iq)) 

This ground is mined and Hell is uuderneaTh. 
Craig. You wear a sword — some other time and place. 
Edg. So, sir! (turns him around and urges him to leave.) 
Craig, (going) Ha! I'll return this tnrn, if I must make 

A detour iuto Spain. (sneaks off.) 
Edg. What do I wait ? 

But dupes will dream that Right asserts itself. 

Ha ! now I read yon motto of luy house, — 

Five centuries are dropping off my soul. 

And here I've got my cue (draws su-ord) 'Tis not enough 

To save, but we must cause the loss of life. 

Ere in thtse juggling times we get our due. 
Lady, (xvithout) You craven hirelings, stand! 

Re-enter Athol. 
Athol. Sir, what a rashness ! Only look without. 
Edg. Do not believe, that I, who'd show the world, 

How to correct its wrongs, am at a loss 

To right myself. 
Athol. Trust me ; through Parliament 

I'll wrest this castle from the Keeper's clutch. 
Edg. And if you get it, keep it for your pains ; 

'Tis not its loss, it's the wrong I grieve. 

He is but one ; I'll be your precedent ; 

Wrench you their spoils from all the public thieves, 

And in my heart, I'll set your monument. 

What, ho ! A pass for Justice ! (leads out Lucy.) 
LAdy. Tear Lucy from his side ! Oh dastard dogs, 

Why do you yield? (claslting of swords heard!) 

(shouts without) A rescue! rescue, help! 
Athol. If daring win, he's surely won his bride. Exit. 



40 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 4. 

Scene II — A Room in Girnintgon House; Bucklaw and Craig- 
ENGELT aitting at a table; several bottles of unne before them. 

Buck. True, Craigie, wine's a social creature in 

A twofold sense : we cannot lodge a bottle, 

It clamors for its fellow — let it come ! (hands Jiim a bottle 
to open.) 
Craig. And mingle with the kindred spirits here. 
Buck. I hate an only bottle, and for lack 

Of better comjiauy, you'll do to save 

Me from that scandal — getting drunk alone. 
Craig. My Lord, the B that follows on that A, 

Is — you consider me your parasite ? 
Buck. As ever clung to forest tree. 
Craig. If you construe our friendship thus — 
Buck. Our friendship ? Pshaw ! 
Craig. Then give me leave to say — 

Buck. What ? You a captain ? Where's your company ? 
Craig. Ha! ha! 
Buck. Unless it be a coterie 

Of overkind and underloyal women, 

Whom you have under you ! A captain ? Pish ! 

Why, you don't own a smack. 
Craig. A thougand of them. 
Buck. I've never seen them. 

Craig. You might have heard them, had you been but near. 
Buck. True ; in your own report. 

Craig. Sir, by their own: you do concede the women ? 
Buck. The devil I do, sir : they concede themselves. 
Craig. Well, then you'll grant, that I command their smacks ? 
Buck. Ha ! ha ! Those are but smuggling smacks; yet sure — 

You're Captain there ; but be my pilot here. 
Craig. On all the seas of wine, you'll venture on. 
Buck. No, for this voyage, your peculiar one ; 

So, watch this catch, and if you grapple it, 

You'll have fast hold on me for all your life. 
Craig. That, Bucklaw, were indeed the hold for me, 

Who in this play of fast and loose with friends, 

Am now no longer trump. 
Buck. Well, hear to heed, — but fill the glasses first ; 

Now pledge me to this toast : My future wife ! 

But wherefore droops thy mighty spirit, and 

Why grow the rubies on thy cheeks so pale ? 
Craig. That wife has turned your wine to vinegar ; • 

Had you said mistress, 'twere a racj'^ toast, 

In flavor and in favor both. 
Buck. How so ? 
Craig. Why, for the flavor of the thing itself. 

Then, by the time she'd cast me out, she'd have 

Outgrown your favor too — but, sir, a wife ? 

Well, curse me, if I know the reason, why 

New married women so disrelish me. 
Buck. The longer wedded make amends for that. 



SC. 2.] KAVENSWOOD. 41 

Craig. Well, tliougli they sli.i^ht uie on tlie wliole, they like 

Me for my parts ; but devil take these biides ; 

They'll oust me ere the houeymoou has Avaned. 
Buck. Could you but stick, uutil that spell were past, 

You might make good your pension for a year. 

But come: 111 ctiauge your vinegar to nectar. 
Craig. That were indeed a miracle. 
Buck. Xot at all ; 

'Tis but, that you provide me with a wife. 
Craig. Ah ! now I see ; Oh ! Fool ! (beats his head.) 
Buck. You prove so now ; 

Why, Craigie, if you'd strike that numskull with 

The hammer of St. Pauls 's roaring Tom, 

You could not rouse your wit : it drowses on 

Too soft a couch. 
Craig, {mhs brow) It's all along my curst farsightedness. 
Buck. Ha ! ha ! nearsightedness you'd say ? 
Craig. I mean it in the word's most daring sense ; 

Far olf in India, yea America, 

I sought my customer, and lo, behold ! (gt'asps his hand.) 

I have him to my hand, in Bucklaw here ! 
Buck. I am your man, if she but answer me. 
Craig. Oh! Man! what will you answer, when her looks 

Shall rouse you as ne'er slogan did a clan ? 

(kneels) By Heavens ! now, on bended knees I drink 

Your toast of toasts : "Your future wife." (They drink; 
he rises. ) 

But you're to blame 

Buck. For your foresightedness ? 

Craig. What else f You still 

Would choose of women, as of venison : 

You'd have them stale ; the ranker their repute, 

The more you relished them. 
Buck. Well, those were slips, 

But not the sort to be engrafted on 

A family tree, and such a one I'd have. 
Craig. In all the nurseries of the world, there's no 

Such vigorous scion, as the bride I know. 
Buck. Too rare, I fear, for me. 
Craig. She's ready for your hand, as if she were 

A new, uncalled for suit of clothes. 
Buck. Tell, who she is ? 
Craig. Miss Lucy Ashton. 
Buck. What ? She, whose rescue from the Master, made 

A gossip of the world f 
Craig. And well it might ; 

For that engagement broke the other up. 
Buck. How so / 

Craig. Their marriage was frustrated by that fight. 
Buck. But is it true, it took a regiment 

Of Cuirassiers, to capture her ? 
Craig. Had there been one horse less, they would have failed. 



42 RAVENSWOOD. | ACT 4. 

Buck. Indeed! 

Ckaig. Most ignoininiously ; for Ravenswood 

Fought like a Nubian lion 'fore Lis den, 

And kept them still at bay, when they had closed 

Upon them in a circle ; had there lacked 

A single link, they'd have slipt through the gap. 
Buck. So she was made a prize ? 
Craig. And how that regiment does prize its prize! 

Its battle Hag, along those victories, 

In our rebellion, now blazons big 

The capture of the Bride of Lammermoor ! 
Buck. Well, in the target of immortal fame, 

That last hits nearer than the others all. 
Craig. Consider, what romantic savor streams 

From her, you'll have to M'ife ? 
Buck. Ay, were it not, that she's forbidden fruit 

Though, being so, I'm tempted all the more. 
Craig. O sir, be tempted still, until you pluck; 

A fruit she is indeed, as clusteriug and 

Exuberant in her charms, as were the grax)es 

Here in their juice — but how is she forbid. 

When 3'ou're as welcome to her as to air ? 
Buck. Ay, by her mother's, not her father's leave. 
Craig. Know sir, in following that divine command 

To be one liesh, the wife's become the man. 
Buck. Though sure of them, I'm skeptical of the daughter, 

Who since her sundred plight, is said to be 

Indeed in wretched plight. 
Craig. O Sir, to cure her contumacy, let 

The mother care, who better understands 

Her reins for breaking in a neckstitf girl, 

Than jockeys do their martingals for colts. 
Buck. Conceded — still, who weds a broken heart, 

Must mend it with his peace. 
Craig. Remember, Lucy's of the Douglas stock, 

Who'd sooner break their promise than their heart. 

I'll vouch, that she'll as gladly mate with you, 

As she was loth to part from Ravens wood. 
Buck. When woman'to man's plea accords her yea, 

Let him still know the reason why she yields. 
Craig. She needs must cast a beggar for a lord. 
Buck. But he's a devilish deal the prettier man. 
Craig. Who? He ? Why he is swarthier than a crow, 

And for his size ? well, grant him to be tall ; 

But, sir, give me a light, stout, middle-sized — 
Buck. The plague upon you! You would say as much, 

If I were hunchbacked, halt and undergrown. 
Craig. What matter, if you were f The mother will 

Convince her daughteV, that this Raveuswood 

Is but a sorry dog, com[>ared to you, 

The paragon of men. 
Buck. And dupe of women ! 

Craig. You shall requite them by this marriage, which 

Shall aggrandize you both in wealth and honor. 



So. 2.] RAVENSWOOD. 43 

Buck. Where Interest points the way, we find conviction, 

Without an argument ; yet, spectre like, 

A something warus inc not to pick it up. 
Craig. What? leave it lying for the next, that comes? 
Buck. Am I a coward ? 
Ckaig. Ha? That another than yourself shall doubt ! 

In courage, you're a nonesuch, braver than 

Yourself— in drink! 
Buck. Aud yet, I may not cross the Master. 
Craig. Yon shall cross after him. 
Buck. I have a dread, that if I counter him, 

The penalty shall be this life he spared. 
Craig. Pshaw ! come, by sheer bad luck you slipt your sword. 
Buck. If this Miss Ashton were the devil's gage. 

Instead of his, I'd dare the taking up. 
Craig. I swear, she'll be the Grand Turk's thousandth, wife, 

Ere Ravenswood, who's worse than dead for her. 
Buck. AVell then, she shall be, since she. must be mine. 
Craig. By heavens, now I'm ho rejoiced in you, 

I'd kiss you for it — if you were a wou'.an. 

(aside) Now I'm secure, the workl may vex my like! 
Buck. But in the making of this match, how do 

You stand accredited ? 
Craig. Accredited ? 

Pish! on all credit! It's a cash transaction; 

Delivery on the spot ; demand her when you will, 

And she'll be banded over. 
Buck. Well, 

I trust this business all in all to you ; 

Meet me to-morrow at the Notary's, 

To write the jointure and the settlement. 

But fill the bumpers ; only in this sip. 

Is there no slip between the cup aud lip ! 
Craig. Here's to the pair, you next shall revel in. (they druiJc) 

Now, Bucklaw, don't unbuckle, la! 
Buck. I am so full of wine aud joy, I must 

Let out my belt. 
Craig. But don't let out your purse ! 
Buck. Now, that reminder comes most apropos ; 

Here is to pay expenses, (throws him his ijurse.) 
Craig. Nay, Bucklaw, now 

IIpou my soul of troth, you use me ill — 

Well, if you force me, I must needs submit ; 

I'd pocket an insult as lief as this, (pockets it.) 
Buck. Yea, do it meekly, without uiurmuriug. 
Craig. Ah, Bucklaw, you're a perfect god in drink ; 

I'm sure, that Bucklaw is the scotch for Bachus ? 
Buck. Well, Venus changed her lovers every day ; 

Still Bachus would remain her favorite, 

Aud therefore, Craigy,— bic — fill up again ! 
Craig. Thus we, who love to drink, now drink to love, (thstf 

And, hark ye, if upon your wedding day, tdrinJc) 

Your courage fail, Oh be pot-valiant then ! 
Buck. How so? 



44 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 5. 

CiiAiG. Why, for the natural, substitute 
The artificial valor — this. 

Buck. May mischance overtake me, but I'll do it ; 
I'll wed her — sober, if I cau — drank, if 
I must — thus recklessly oblivious 
I'd mate the daughter of the devil's dam. 
Step down the cellar — hie — and fetch us up 
A bottle of that sixteen, seventy-three. (Craig, starts.) 
Say, Craigie, now, if all the w^orld were Spanish, 
You'd be — hie — general, and no tapster — eh ! 

Craig. For that I'll mulct you in a bottle more. 

Buck. Well, let it be a dozen— hie —egad — 

Upon such news, we'll make a night of — hie — 
(As CiiAiGENGELT (joes oiit, BuCKLAVV tumbles off his chair.) 

ACT V. 

Scene First — The Rail in Eavensuiood Castle; enter Lady 
AsHTON and Maid from opposite 



Lady. Your looks betoken (Maid shows ring) Give it me ! 

Maid. I slipt it from her finger while she swooned, (hands it.) 

Lady. No matter for her swoons — Your destiny 
Was figured in your form ; Your serpent's curse, 
In your refusal to my maiden hand. 
I'd have deserved, did I permit you to 
Repeat it on my daughter's. Though you slime 
My memory, you shall not hiss my hopes. 
For thus I braise your head ! (puis it in j^urse.) 
If you arc qaestioned, you know nothing. 

Maid. Here is a letter too, the i)0stman l^'ft. (hands it.) 

Lady. Again from Ravenswood ! And you for him 
Gave one from Lucy ? 

Maid. No, your Grace, not I. 

Lady. Beware! (reads) " The following post brings me to you, 
" Till then I am as one interred alive. 
" Your ever faitliful, never changing Eflgar." 
Go too, your predecessors' way : (hums it) Thus turn 
Their hopes to ashes! This betrayal proves 
Th' improvident fool he is — Forewarned, forearmed. 
A fortnight hence, or in a week he's here, 
But I'll forestall him, if he come to-morrow ; 
If she'll not bend, she'll break ! Go tell your ward, 
Her respite is revoked : she must comply forthwith. 

JExit Maid. 
Enter Servant. 

Sery. Captain Craigengelt. 

Lady. Bid him come in. Exit Serv. 

He comes upon my wish. 

Enter Craigengelt. 
With all the haste 
You can command, bid Bucklaw to prepare 
His nuirriage with my daughter for to-night. 



SC. 1.] RAVENSWOOD. 45 

Craig. This veiy nigbt ? Now, this is news indeed ! 
Lady. You well may say so, for it also ends 

The tevm of your probation. 
Craig, (kisses lie)' hand) Ah ! your Grace ! 
Lady. When in a son-in-law, I am secure, 

I may relieve me of my wedded clog. 
Craig. The sweet fruition of my hopes at last ! 

But Urgency chokes dallying ceremony ; 

ni speed upon the lightning from your eyes. Exit. 

Lady. Oh ! what a difference 'tween man and man ! 
Enter Bide-the-Bent. 

Though loth, yet Reverend Bide-the-Bent, we may 

Abide your bending of our daughter's mind 

For only this one day — 
Bide. Alas ! your Grace ! 

Then, in my person you dispense with grace? 

Must my preferment come to naught again ? 
Lady. If you but will, you'll get its fill. 
Bide. Ah, if your grace but wills it. 
Lady. Though with a high hand we might carry it, 

Yet j5olicy forbids — 
Bide. Wherein your Grace 

Approves herself a very Douglas still. 
Lady. If, for this last, your persuasion fail. 

Will you accord the holy sanction of 

Your countenance, however ruthless we 

Proceed with this undutiful daughter ? 
Bide. Why, bless your Grace, it is my avocation 

To go about, and spread a good report 

Of heaven's Lord, — Alas ! he heeds me not. 

For I'm still unpreferred ! — and shall I then 

Deny your Grace, who proves my better patron ? 
Lady, (gives hand) Sir, we're agreed — to save my perilled 
house, 

I'd rather shun a blunder than a crime. 
Bide. There, still your Grace is wisely politic ; 

Our Church has absolution for a crime, 

But for a blunder there is no relief. 
Lady. Well, reverend Bide-the-Bent, abide this night, 

And Scotland's richest benefice is yours. 

Here come our straying sheep : she has been once 

Our Shepherdess of Lamraermoor, but now — 
Enter Lucy. 

Your last spiritual guide you slandered as 

A hireling hag of hell, so now you have 

A Minister of Heaven. 
Lucy. His deeds, good mother, rather than your words, 

Hhall teach us whence he hails. 
Bide. Well said my daughter. 

Lucy. Would I were daughtered less, and fathered more ! 
Bide. Nay, in his servant sliall you })raise the Lord. 
Lucy. Oh! prove yourself a heavenly minister, 

By doing now its charity ; counsel you 

My mother here, that she no further urge 



46 RAVENSAVOOD. [ACT 5. 

Me be a traitress to my troth anrl soul ; 

Admonish her, how vile a deed it is, 

To force a daugliter to commit the sin 

Of spiritual adultery ! 
Bide. How mean you this ? You are not married yet ? 
Lucy. Oh, sir, I am : here is my bridal ring — 

Oh, Heavens ! Mother ! even this ? 
Bide. Ay, some Miss Ashtou gave a rendezvous — 

But 'twas not you — 
Lucy. Sir, you a reverend ? 

Bide. At Mermaid's Well, to Edgar Ravenswood ; 

That was no marriage ; heath'uish were the rites — 

The Lord who witnessed it, forgive the slip ! — 

'Twas all without the sar.ction of the Church, 

Hence Heaven knows it not. 
Lucy. Oh, sure it does, for I'm in Heaven since. 

But as you reverends have not tied our bond, 

So you'll not losen it. 
Lady. But I command. 

It shall be sundered ! 
Bide. Mark it well, your Grace ; 

To Avin his children from the Lord, the Arcb- 

Seducer weans them from his servants first. 

Let us not hope, she doubts the scriptures too ; 

No vow, the parents disallow, shall bind. 
Lady. Theref(u- are men so faithless to their wives. 
Lucy, {to Bide) Forbear ; I thank my God, that he has 
placed 

Within, what prompts me know Him better, than 

By His professing ministers. 
Bide. Ha! if not 

The hope of Heaven, nor the fear of Hell, 

Yet shall you heed the terrors of the earth ! 

Hence be exhorted unto righteousness ; 

For, truly, you are to be pitied. 
Lucy. I were indeed, did I permit myself. 

To be thus juggled of my troth and bliss — 

Is it for this you would be praised ? 
Bide. Herein I needs must take your mother's part ; 

When you are Lady Bucklaw— 
Lucy. ' Sir? 

Bide. I'll do 

The same for you against your froward daughter. 
Lucy. Wherefor I'll pay you with — a benefice. 

Pray, let me hence, back to my prison cell ; 

A loathed person is the worst duress. 
Bide. The evil may abide no godly man. 
Lady. I'll meet you in the parlor.— Exit Bide. 

Lucy. Oh ! mother, let us speak from heart to heart. 

And spare nie hence these intermediaries. 
Lady. You have repulsed the last ; this night shall make 

You Bucklaw's wife. 
Lucy. O God ! Is it then true, 

That you would do me this ? 



SC. 1] KAVENSWOOD. 47 

Lady. Conform yourself. 

Lucy. It must be dreadful, uot to own a mother, 

But it is killing to have one, and not 

To know a motlier's love ! 
Lady. And yet, 

That mother has endured her child-bed throes ; 

Has perilled her own life in giving yours ! 

Because, I am no doating, maudlin fool. 

To fondle and caress you like an ape, 

I am, forsooth no mother! Ingrate dupe ! 

Thank my repellant nature, you're not spoilt. 
Lucy. I have be wept the hapless orphan's lot. 

But now ? Ah ! me ! 
Lady. You wish you were an orphan too ? 
Lucy. May Heav'n forgive me, from my soul I do ; 

For I'm more wretched in my mother, than 

An orphan. 
Lady. You are convicted ! I'm too much to you, 

And to your father ; but, beware you both ! 
Lucy, (gras^ys Tier hand) My mother, I implore you, say not so I 

I love you, love you more, a thousand times, 

Than you will give me leave to prore. — 

'Midst all my sorrow, I have ne'er forgot, 

I can have but one mother on this earth I 
Lady. Nor can you duplicate a spouse. 
Lucy! For me one husband in one Ravenswood. 

Oh ! let me have him ! he shall love you too : 

He does not hate you now : yea, when you wronged 

Him so, He willed you not one word of ill ; 

Then, mother, be to him, as he to you. 
Lady. Be he to me, as I to him, unchanged! 
Lucy. My mother, I conceive a happier life 

Than now is yours. 
Lady. And so do I. 

Lucy. Ah ! you shall have it, if you share with me. 
Lady. So I intend : with you and — Bucklaw. 
Lucy. Impossible ! I'll yield and tit myself 

To all, so you but let me have my love. 
Lady. Your love's the fabric of your fantasy ; 

Erase from it the name of Ravenswood, 

Then substitute Lord Bucklaw's in his stead, 

And see ! your fairy palace stays the same. 
Lucy. As well breathe in my corpse a secoud soul. 

As make my spirit own another love. 
Lady. At your age, love is like a magic puzzle : 

Double your score of years, and lo ! auother picture. 
Lucy. No, mother, your own heart disproves such change. 
Lady. Break off— no more — you shall be Bucklaw's wife ! 
Lucy. (Icneels) Oh mother! but one week's delay ! 
Lady. You had it : 'tis tevoked. 
Lucy. But till to-morrow ! 
Lady. Were I disposer of eternity, 

You'd get not longer till to-night. 



48 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 5. 

Lucy. Ob mother, ponder it ! if this be spoilt, 

You cau give me no second life. 
Lady. Because, I caunot, I dispose it so, 

This one prove not your curse. Exit. 

Lucy, (rises) Lost! Castaway! Uudoue, by whence I am ! 

Oh God ! my sorrow is of linger size, 

Than I can realize ; but this I feel : 

I'll not be Bucklaw's wife, and come the worst ! — 

The worst? Ah, me ! what else but that can come ? 

My cheated hopes have gasped themselves to death ! 

The postman called and left — no line for me ; 

No Edgar comes to free me from my doom ; 

And my good Angel, I so fondly hoped, 

Would succor me, in this, my utmost need, 

Stays absent too : It is delusion all. 

And I despair ! 

Enter Henry ivith Case and WiUoiv-twig. 

My Harry still I greet you with a kiss ; 

Oh, take this from my soul, as 'twere my last! (kisses him) 
Henry. How is it with you, Luce ? Your lips are ashy as 

This willow, Douglas bade me bring to you. 
Lucy. His fittest gift, although he knows it not. 
Henry. He'd have me lie to you, the Master's bride 

In Germany had sent it you to wear ; 

But sooth, I cut it at the Mermaid's Well. 
Lucy. Preserve it Harry ; it will keep alive 

Until you plant it on your sister's grave. 

Where think, you read the saddest tale of love. 

That ever thrilled and throed a maiden's breast, 
Henry. No, I'll replace it in its home, the Well. 
LuCY'. And so you shall, for there I will be buried. 
Henry. That spot is dear to you — and by my troth ! 

This is the very dress, you wore that day, 

I shot the raven there! You seem as fond 

Of it, as I of my first kilt; and see ! 

Here are those blood stains yet. 
Lucy. O, then it bounded in a lieaven ! — Now, 

It prisons in a drear, chaotic night. 

Where starlike glitter but the thoughts and things. 

My Memory elicits from that day : 

All its associates, sorrow consecrates 

To relics, and the dearest is yourself. 
Henry. I now like Bucklaw's present less. 
Lucy. That name forbid your lips : you took the bribe ? 
Henry. You'll prize it better by your sight, than by 

My i)raise : it is a dagger (takes it out of case) 
Lucy. The gift portrays the giver : a dagger to a child I 
Henry. A sword's too big : I wear it, dressed in state 

Upon your wedding. 
Lucy. Ha, let me see it ! Is it sharp ? (he hands it her.) 
Henry. Damascus blade ; its very shadow cuts 

A hair ; see but the inlaid pearl and gold ! 



So. 2.] RAVENSWOOD. 49 

Lucy. I've sliiiddered to behold base, murd'rous steel 

So jewel honored ; now I feel its charm. 

I shall admire it, when I see't again (returns it) 

You'll wear it, are you sure, to-night ? 
Henry. ' I shall, 

And go to dress me now ; you better haste, 

And do the same ; the sun sinks down apace. Exit. 

Lucy. He goes, and with despair Lm left alone. 

(kneels) My heavenly Father ! In this final strait, 

My parents force me, I appeal to you ; 

For Earth afibrds no refuge to my soul. 

Whose only choice — the madhouse or the grave ! 

If ruined Spirits still be fit fur bliss, 

Oh, then let my firm resolution fail ! 

But if amongst your blest, you'd have no soul, 

Save in its wholesome state, oh Father ! then 

Confirm my purpose, that I rush to you. 

Before that crazing storm undoes my mind, 

And prostrate, I'll account to you a life. 

Fraught with such sorrow. — Oh, my heart ! My brain! 

My father, save ! Oh save me ! Let me not go mad ! 

(swoons.) 

Scene II — The Cabinet in Eavensu-ood Castle ; Enter Ashton, 
Lady and Dougl.vs. 

Ash. An evil air pervades our house : yet on 

The eve of the event, we may recede. 
Doug. Shall I stand as a fool for Parliament ; 

And be defeated, but for Bncklaw's help ? 
Lady, (to Doug.) Cease to be Colonel too, and be, like him, 

The beggar as I married him. (to Ash.) But, sir, 

We spurn your baseness, as v:e would a worm, 

Than which 3 ou have no more ambition. 
Ash. Oh Douglas, is it naught to y>u, that since 

I'm set to order with my self, the world 

Does run so smooth with me ? 
Lady. Why should it not, since your's the downward c ourae ? 
Ash. Because I've paltered with the man, who proved 

More than my child! 
Doug. And did he not ? 

To the exclusion of your first born son. 

He got this very castle, while you live ? 
Ash. Sir Athol did it, and not Ravenswood, 

Whom I shall father yet ! 
Lady. Sir, whose perdition did you imprecate, 

Else in his issue, you be cursed again ? 
Ash. That curse of hate I'll change to friendship's blessing. 
Lady. By being damned through him in your own blood? 
Ash. I'm pledged to him by Heaven's retribution. 

Not only on myself, but on my house. 
Lady. You did it then without authority : 

Your vow commits not me. 



50 RAVENS WOOD. f AOT 5. 

Doug. And neither me. 

Lady. Nor any of my house ; yea, not a dog- 
Shall stand within its danger. 

Ash. Save alone 

My daughter and my perjured self; Poor Lucy ! 

Lady. Your love for her is of the kind which apes 
Have for their young : to strangle them in their 
J'ond ignorance, as you would her with Ravenswood. 

Ash. In whom our Scotland owns the genius of the age ! 

Lady. May Heaven keep forever from my house 
The curse of thriftless genius, whereof 
The owner dies a bankrupt in estate ! 
For me the tact and talent to achieve 
The stubborn fact of power and of wealth ! 

Ash. His mission's great success will get him both : 
Think of his fame ! 

Lady. Ah, like a neW' disease : 

No tongue, but croaks his name ! 

Ash. The world converted to his teaching, shall 
Red ate its era from his birth I 

Lady. He shall not be my son-in-law, and if 
He were the second savior of mankind. 
My son, do you still wish this marriage? 

Doug. First and last ! 

Lady. Sir, this the verdict on your last appeal. 

Ash. 'Tis meet a wretch succumb, who lacks the strength, 
To bear him up. 

Lady. Your fears are idle, as they ever were. 
But tune your spirit to the festal mood. 
And all is well. Come, husband, I'll deem this 
My second wedding, happier than my first. 

Ash. I would not, yet I needs must dread. 

Lady. 'Jhat's for you lose the daughter in the bride. 

Ash. God grant, that be my worst of loss ! But, oh ! 

Disaster hastens with gigantic strides ! Exeunt. 

Last Scene — The Hall in Eavenswood Castle, lavishly decorated 
for the Wedding; Bucklaw, Ckaigengelt, Henry, Bide- 
the-Bent, Lords and Ladies. 

Craig. My noble Lords, let us congratulate 

My patron on this feast, which will be famed 
While marriage shall prevail, {bows, all do lilceivise.) 

Buck. My merit's but the acting on a hint ; 
The credit of conceiving it, is due 
To Captain Craigengelt. 

Ladies, {gather around Vraig.) What happy man ! 

Craig. Yea, when the world hears of this nuptial pomp, 
The wedded will ignore their marriage, and — 

All. Ha, ha ! 

Craig. They'll have it over, modelled after this. 
Enter Douglas. 

Doug. Be welcome, brother, to the Douglas house. 



SC. 3.] RAVENSWOOD. 51 

Buck. Sir, I frateruize with your kin, unto ' 

The tenth degree- my Ciiptaiu Craigengelt. 
Doug, {slightingly) I've had the honor. 
Craig, (aside) This is the ill of being known too well. 

(to Doug ) I say it loyally : compared to this. 

The marriage of the Queen, was but a wake. 
Doug. Our means allow it, sir. 

Craig, (cuncle) Ha ! doifed again ; but I will face it out. 
Enter Lady Ashton n-ith Lucy gorgeously arrayed, folloiced by 

Sir Ashton. 
All. Ah ! 

Craig. Lord Bucklaw, and his bride of Lammermoor ! 
Lords. Lord Bucklaw, and his bride of Lammermoor ! 
Crowd (outside) Lord Bucklaw, and his bride of Lammermoor! 
Lucy. Oh, thus the sacrificial lamb is cheered ! 

But I, unlike, am conscious of my doom ! 
Buck. This great ovation's greater moiety 

Is yours, my bride. 
Lucy. " To have it, would destroy it — keep it all. 

And it shall live. 
Buck. Nay, verily, I protest, (about to take Iter hwid.) 

Lucy. Forbear, your touch is poison ! 
Lady. What! Is this your promise? 
Lucy. I will be quiet — if I can. 

Unlace my stays — a shroud oppresses me — 

Take off these trappings ! Give ! Oh, give me back 

My Mermaid dress ! (is supported to a sofa.) 
Lady. Is't thus you are a bride ? 
Lucy. Of death! 
Lady. Nay then — Most Reverend Bide-the Bent, 

We ask your blessing on the ceremony. 
Bide, (prays) You, who by Lords are graced the mightiest 
Lord, 

As we look up to you, look down on us : 

Oh, blest the issue of these holy rites, 

And bless this couple for all time ! Amen. 
All. Amen ! 

Lucy, (^o Bide.) Is not the soul immortal? 
Bide. It shall not know curruption. 
Lucy. Yet you deny to it its choice of mate 

For that eternity! 
Bide. The Church's grace smiles on a parent's check. 
Lucy. Dissembling Parson ! ere to-morrow night. 

You'll be accused before your Maker. 
Bide. Ha ! 

Lady, (takes from bosom) Here are the marriage articles ; 
It first 

Behoves the father —husband sign. 
Ash. It swims before my eyes — where shall I write ? 
Lady. Right here. 

Ash. This pen's a bar of lead, (signs.) 
L.4lDY. To me it is but what it is — a quill, (signs.) 

My son, you're next in law, though first in deed. 

(Doug, signs.) 



^^ RAVENSWOOD. 



[Act 5. 



Ti.^-^^\*r^^yf''*^"*^,^^^®' ^^1^ y«" unbend yourself? 

Bide. May through my fingers flow the Lord's good grace ! 

Lady, (to Buck.) My very son, first you, then Lucy signr*^ 
Buck, lor such a prize ? I'd sign for hundred like^ fsigm.) 
Lady Now daughter dear, the pen's the magic wand. 

That with one stroke turns all your Jll to good, 

And makes you be my child indeed. 
Lucy. Ay, madam, for this once, I'll be your like 
Lady. Ah, that's my Lucy now! 

■^^^^'i • 1 , ^^ ^®r own will : 

Ihis hand, Its instrument, was never made 
To be my soul's undoer— I'll not sign ! 

All. She will not sign ! 

Lady. My noble guests, be not amazed at this ; 
S"^n?f ^^^^^^^ suffers with a malady : 
She 11 have her lucid interval at twelve o'clock. 
And then she'll yield. 

T^'* ^^^^; , , , What ! Is she lunatic ? 

LADY. She 8 somewhat mad with love ; but marriage is 

A sovereign cure for that, and I prefer, 

fehe rave before, than rue it afterwards, 
-r ^^. ^ (Refreshments served around.) 

LADY. Hist, Maid : one word in private, 
^^^v /I . Henry, come; 

Your dress is disarranged (abstracts his danger, and 

conceals it m her dress.) So, now, 'tis well ' 
Lady. (^^^Maid.) Heed you: the bridal chamber; on your 

Do not mistake it ! 
Maid. Miss Ashton, you're to sad. 
Lucy The bridal mood's to weep, and why not mine ? 

1 hree periods are the crises in our life : 

Our birth, our marriage and our death! The first 

1 ve had, the second I shall skip, so but 

ihe third anu last remains for me ' 
Maid. Come, take some rest. 
Lucy Where is our god, there is our heaven ; this 

Were mine were Edgar here; but lacking him. 

It IS my hell ; let's quit it. ExitivUhMui> 

WW?h''?'^?"'^^?'^-. (^^'^'^'P^^ys; light turned on.) -^ ^ 
What's this ? The portraits changed ! Who dared this deed ? 

1st Lord, The Ravens wood's in th' Ashton's placeT^ ceases.) 

2d Lord. What base affront ! 

3d Lord. What insult to our host ! 

Buck. There's treachery abroad ! Unsheath your swords ' 

T . T.v^ ^ "^^^^ whatever come ! [^e and Lords do so. ) 

AT ^ .X. .. Tear down the traitors! 

Not yet, the living dare to brave us here, 
And neither shall the dead. The music play, 

(They sheath sicords ; a dirge xylayed.) 



SC. 3.] RAVENSWOOD. 53 

Andonward with the dance! (fo Buck )Hear this! Adh-oef 
Stop! Hold! The players, all the world's suborned! 

{As the Music hushes, a spectre-Uke figure glides across.) 

Some Guests. Ha! 

Other Guests. Lo, there! 

1st Lord. The ghost of Alice ! 

9vr» T-oRD 'Tis herselt. 

Zvcfifollo'o^) Detain her! Seize her! Let the gates be 

LvDY^'Lord BuoWaw; haste ! look to your bride : bei-e toke 
The key; she's ia the bridal Chamber. (B^^klaw m( 

DOUG, (retm-nmg) Be not dismayed; 'tis all along a crazy 
wench ; 
A rubbish left us by the Ravenswoods. 
Lady. % BmE.) Your blessing went to Hell; recall it quick, 

Before it plague us more. 
Bide. The Lord must needs— 

Lady. More interruption ! are the doors not locked . 
Son, Douglas, how is this ? 

Enter Edgar with Athol. 

^^a'^t^ftrLr^rUoc, tMr .ay) How dare you in o>n. 

castle ? , 

Edg. 'Tis yours or not, according to my welcome , 

i bring you peace. 
Lady The conjuror has sent his tricks before, 

And here he is himself; the charlatan ! 
Edg What ? still injurious words ! Then, Uncle, mme 

Must be the taking, not the giving way. 
Craig, {sword in hand) By Heaven! myself will stab him 

where he stands ! 
Ash. Stop, Captain ; there's no volunteering here. 
Athol. Sir, this for you. {delivers order to Ashton.) 
Ash. An order from the British Cabinet, 
To quit this castle on the instant of 
Its presentation ! Raveuswood ! how could 
You do me this ? {sinks into chair.) 
Edg. You shall not fail me twice. 
Ash. All I surrender you ; be Master here I 
lIdy. Oh! recreant Dastard, would you thus requite 
This vengeance of the Ravenswoods ? 
{to Edg.) Sir, in the school of Hell you learnt to read 
Yon motto : You knew well to bide your time ! 
Edg. To save vou in your own despit^. 
Lady. Not with our castle do you get our child. 

She is another's wife. 
Edg 'Tis false ! she would Mot sign. 
L^dy Sign ornot sign, 

' She never shall be yours ; your charm's disowned 
By her it bound : here take {hands him the ring.) 
Edg Yourself you dupe ; ,,,-„■ 

The rino- that binds us has been wrought by Heaven— 
Ha ! where is Lucy! Speak ! where is my bride ! 



<>4 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 5. 

Lady. She is secure. 
Ei)G. Aud Rucklaw absent toof 

It strikes my braiu— a tliuuderholt ! 
Oh, Monster speak with all yonr hydra-tongues : 
Where is my bride ? 
Lady. Beyond your reach. 
Edg. Then I'll assert my right ! 

(Douglas and Lords draw their swords. The latter, as 
favoring Edgar, open the way for him. Craigengklt, in 
dumb show, reminds them, they are not hound to him, hut to 
the Ashtons, whereon they obstruct his passage, until addressed 
by Edgar, when they open it as before.) 

(to Doug.) Bar not my way; I will. Are you the knave, 
Who d go to Parliament across his sister's grave ? 

(Douglas partly yields.) 
Lady, (to Doug.) What! ycm a Colonel? Let me have your 

sword. (BouG. lays hand on his sJwulder.) 

Edg By Heavens! Douglas, for your sister's sake, 

I love you better than myself— let go ! (DouG. does so.) 
Lady. Were you not from the surer side, I'd say, 

You are a bastard to the Douglas house. 
Doug, (to Edg.) Go back, unless you'd step across their 

swords ; 
Edg. Corruption glutted Lairds ! Behold, to what 

Your country's sale has brought you I But be still 
The stirrup holders to the ruling Lords, 
Until the Commons shall confound you both ! 
Lady, (to Doug.) Are you infected by their cowardice ? 
Doug. His look benumbs me, mother. 
Edg. Fm but a drowning man and sink the third, 

Last time. My Lucy, Lucy, I am come ! 
Lady, (to Doug.) O pusillanimous slave! for what wear you 

A sword? (about to grasp it.) 
Doug. Nay then ; look, Master, there's my sister ! (stabs him 
-r , , . [.in the side.) 

Ladies. (shrieJc) Murder I (all rush out.) 

Ldg. (ts sujjjjorted to seat.) O Alice] Prophetess! 
Now do I know it, but to end it all ! 
Oh f look for Lucy ! now— I can— no more — 
Athol. (to Doug.) I have a mind to send you back to Hell, 
You left a void, none but yourself can fill. 
(to Lady.) Make it your mother's boast, to own so old 
Assassin in so voung a son ! 
Lady. ' So old ? 

Athol. As you, who did what all its men could not : 
You've damned the name of Douglas for all time. 
Enter Caleb. 
Cai.. Wolfe's Crag is struck by lightning. 
^^^- And in time, (swoons) 

Cal. (supports him) Alas! my Master! 
^^^2^- Lords guard the doors, and hold 

The two assassins with her paramour. (Lords guard doors.) 
Ash. Her paramour ! Who ? Captain Craigengelt ? 
Athol. So says the world. 



So. 3] RAVENSWOOD. 55 

Ash. Oh ! serpent hag, is this 

Your secoud marriage, hapi)ier thau the tirst ? 
Lady. If you had been, not I had been the man. 
Ash. For this was I a double dealing wretch ! 

Live, Master, live ! Come I will bind your wonnd. 
Cal. Not to a king I'll yield it. {bandages him.) 
Ash. Revive and live for Lucy ! She is yours. 
Edg. {recoveriiKj) Not me — save her — all else cut short — she'll be 

Undone ! search for her ! Rouse the house ! haste all ! 
Ash. Sir, she is well, 
Edg. Oh ! why am I then murdered ? 
Ash. {to Lady.) Woman, where's 

My daughter? 
Lady. Where else, but with her bridegroom should she be ? 
Ash. {to Edg.) You hear, she's safe. 
Edg. Great God ! Are you unwitted all? 
Ash. True, I am curse benumbed. 

Edg. Oh ! fly— search all the rooms ! {general commotion.) 
Henry. Where is my poniard? 
Ash. Now Heaven, spare that curse ! 
Buck. {wUMn) Help! Murder! Help! 
Edg. Oh ! my presaging fears ! I'm murdered here ; 

She's slain within ; we die a double death ! 
Buck, {within) Help ! save me ! Oh ! 

/Several Maids rnsh in. 
Lady. Quick, Douglas! To the Bridal Chamber. 

IJxit Doug, into Chamber. 

{to Lords) Stay back ! let none but women enter. Exeunt 

AsHTON and Maids into same. 
Doug, {returns to door) O horror, horror ! Blood, how quick 
you bred, 

It is my murder, that's begotten this! 

I dare not back ; search you fo" her; she's murdered him. 

(BucKLAW from another door is borne across the stage.) 
Ash. {inside) Oh! my poor child! 
Edg. {to Cal.) Now, do your dearest service, bear me up. 

(Lucy, is borne in, followed by Ashton.) 
Ash. {breaks daw )t) My poor, curse stricken Lucy ! 
Lucy. He's come! My bridegroom summoned me! 
1st Maid. You've murdered him. 
Edg. {sinJcs beside her) He lives to die with you! 
Lucy, (shrieks) Ah, Edgar ! You're not hurt ? Not you I 
struck — 

Not you did wrench the terrible dagger from 

My hand, and plunge it here ! ( points to gash) 
Edg. Oh! God! 'twas there, 

Not here, my life was struck ! 
Lucy. Oh ! had you come a minute sooner ; then ! — 

But no lamenting now ! My life was but 

One wish, that you be mine, and now I'm blest ; 

What Life denied me, kinder Death allows ; 

My hasband ! 



56 RAVENSWOOD. [ACT 5. 

Edg. For Eternity ! Our bliss 

Beiug more tban earth's, we could but taste in hope. 

Oh! we had strayed in the wrong mansion of 

Our Father's house, and tliis has been our fare ! 
Lucy. 'Tis not my wound it is my heart that breaks. 

My Edgar, since you saved my life, I walked 

But on a tether round the stake of death ; 

And when you joined me, life did glide so sweet, 

We wound it up too quickly. Pray live you, 

And let me die alone. 
Edg. Do not believe it ! 

Between our souls the tackle is too strong, 

And neither snaps, but drags the other on ; 

Here is the rent of mine {tears off handcuje) One life, one 
death ! 
Lucy. Our grave's bespoken at the Mermaid's Well, {dies) 
Edg. In you, I loved mankind ; my spirit, in 

Its parting throes, would over at my eyes. 

That to their woes, it hence can throb no more. 
Athol. Oh ! you who ever pored on death, impart 

Us your presentiment. 
Edg. I could put tongue into that lasting book, 

Whereof yon dial is the title page, 

If it were not, that my precursor tugs 

Me from this pivot of eternity ! 

Let me see nature ! {window opened) On my heart I bear 

Your mother-mole ; Oh ! now take back your son ! {dies) 
Cal. {holding one hand) My Master ! 
Athol. {holding other hand) Oh ! Eavenswood ! 
Lady Ashton, Douglas and Craigengelt are arrested as 

THE CURTAIN FALLS. 



3477-59 
Lot U 



ov. 






'^^c,^ 



L'O' 
















O H O ' AJ ^^ » / 1 ' 




,<i.'^ ^*-. 















^^^^^' 



^PV _ 







^^.„< ^-jm^i^^\ -J-,.*" 



■^0' 

.^^ 




^oK 












































s • • '^ 



